The Egyptians shaved their heads, but let their hair grow as a sign of mourning.
The Assyrians wore it shoulder-length.
The male Israelites trimmed it so as not to wear it too long (Num. 6:5); but the women wore it very long (Song. 7:5; 1 Cor. 11:15). Priests were prohibited from shaving their heads (Lev. 21:5) and all Israelites were prohibited from shaving their eyebrows in mourning (Deut. 14:1).
The leper had to shave off all his hair, as well as his beard and eyebrows, on the day of his purification (Lev 14:8, 9). The captive woman chosen to be the wife of a Hebrew and the Nazarites at the end of their vow had to shave their heads (Deut. 21:12; Num. 6:18).
The way believers wear their hair, men and women, is not indifferent to God (1 Cor. 11:14-16; 1 Pet. 3:3).
Meaning of HAIR
The Egyptians shaved their heads, but let their hair grow as a sign of mourning.