Harman Patil (Editor)

Mitsouko (perfume)

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Type
  
Women's fragrance

Label
  
Guerlain

Released
  
1919

Mitsouko (perfume)

Mitsouko is a 1919 perfume by Guerlain. Its name is derived from the French transliteration of a Japanese female personal name Mitsuko. Its top notes are a fruity chypre, with floral middle notes and spice base notes.

Contents

Its top notes include bergamot, its middle notes peach, rose, iris, clove, and jasmine, and its base notes vetiver, oakmoss, and labdanum.

History

Mitsouko was created by perfumer Jacques Guerlain in 1919. The perfume has remained continuously available ever since.

Mitsouko is preserved in its original 1919 formulation in the archives of the Osmothèque, donated to the collection by Thierry Wasser. It has been re-formulated several times in the modern era. It was the favorite cologne of comic legend Charlie Chaplin.

Name

There is no definitive information on the origin of the name. One account of the origin of the name is that it was inspired by the name of the heroine of Claude Farrère's novel La bataille (The Battle). The novel is set in Japan during the Russo-Japanese War, and chronicles a fictional amour fou between a British Navy Officer and one "Mitsouko", the wife of Fleet Admiral Baron Tōgō Heihachirō. Both Togo and the British officer sail to war, and Mitsouko awaits with reserve to see which of the two will return alive to her. The other possibility is that it was inspired by the story of Mitsuko Aoyama, the mother of Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi.

References

Mitsouko (perfume) Wikipedia