Glossary · Landmark

Mitsouko (Guerlain, 1919)

Mitsouko (Guerlain, 1919, Jacques Guerlain) is the canonical chypre-fruity fragrance, built on a bergamot-peach-oakmoss-labdanum accord, universally cited in niche perfumery as a reference study in structural complexity and longevity (Société Française des Parfumeurs, accessed 2026-05-27).

Definition

Mitsouko was created by Jacques Guerlain in 1919 and named after the heroine of Claude Farrère's novel La Bataille. It was among the first perfumes to use aldehyde C-14 (peach lactone), which generates the characteristic ripe-peach facet at the heart of the composition (ISIPCA teaching materials, accessed 2026-05-27).

The accord: bergamot and spices (top), rose-jasmine-peach-ylang (heart), oakmoss-labdanum-vetiver-benzoin-cinnamon (base). IFRA restrictions on oakmoss have altered the base significantly in current production, which is why vintage bottles are sought by collectors for the original mossy depth.

Legacy

Mitsouko is cited in virtually every perfumery curriculum as the reference chypre-fruity structure. Its influence on niche perfumery is structural: many subsequent chypres cite it as an antecedent, and the combination of natural mossy materials with a peach-lactone heart remains a template studied at ISIPCA and by independent perfumers globally.

According to Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez in Perfumes: The Guide, Mitsouko is one of the most complex and emotionally powerful compositions in the canon, a standard reference in niche perfumery criticism (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-27).

Sources

Published 2026-05-27 · Updated 2026-05-27 · Last fact check: 2026-05-27 · Osmetheca