There is no proof that Cleopatra ever bathed in milk. Perhaps milk was used in a bath oil or mixed in a skin lotion. You have to remember that Egypt is a hot country and in Cleo's day there was no refrigeration. If she bathed in milk as some suggest, it would be stinky sour milk hardly a bath for a queen.
No she used milk
Well, Cleopatra was supposed to take baths in the milk of asses. However this is unlikely. Any milk would curdle and turn sour in the hot climate of Egypt. Who would want to bath themselves in sticky, stinky milk? This is not to say that milk was not used as an ingredient in some cosmetic mixture, such as makeup or a body lotion, but as a bath, no way.
There is a myth that Cleopatra bathed in asses milk as a beauty treatment. While she may have used milk as an ingredient in a skin lotion, its highly unlikely that she would take a bath in sticky milk. The truth is that Cleopatra bathed in water like everyone else, except in her case the water was probably scented with perfume.
History has said that Cleopatra bathed in milk to make her seem more seductive, but it is a very real possibility that she did. Cleopatra was said to always have complements on her beautiful skin and the milk baths may have helped with that. Milk has natural chemicals in it that breaks down dead skin. Her baths were probably not just milk; milk was more than likely just added to the water of the bath.
There is absolutely no proof that Cleopatra ever bathed in donkey' milk. As Egypt is a hot country and in Cleo's day there was no refrigeration of air conditioning, milk of any kind would soon turn sour and curdle. Hardly something a queen would want to bathe in. However Cleopatra could possibly have used donkey's milk in a skin lotion mixed with other ingredients or even in a type of bath oil.
The same as you bath it normally only fill the bath with milk.
How does milk bath benefit your body.....??
Yes. Egyptian queen Cleopatra, well-known for her extraordinary beauty and she loved to bathe in milk.
she bathed in milk
The cast of Milk Bath - 2012 includes: Ashley Miniaci
Cleopatra
No she didn't. She bathed in milk. Scientists in today's modern times have discovered that milk baths actually do help cure some skin issues. It was Queen Mary I who supposedly bathed in the blood of young maids, which she believed kept her looking young.