The Story
Why it exists.
Named for the ancient king, Herod channels regal authority through unexpected softness. Olivier Pescheux built the fragrance around a central tension: the sharpness of cinnamon and pepper against the cushion of tobacco and vanilla. Launched in 2012, it arrived during Parfums de Marly's golden era of masculine releases and quickly became the house's quiet bestseller, the one that converts skeptics.
If this were a song
Community picks
Feeling Good
Nina Simone
The Beginning
Named for the ancient king, Herod channels regal authority through unexpected softness. Olivier Pescheux built the fragrance around a central tension: the sharpness of cinnamon and pepper against the cushion of tobacco and vanilla. Launched in 2012, it arrived during Parfums de Marly's golden era of masculine releases and quickly became the house's quiet bestseller, the one that converts skeptics.
What sets Herod apart from the crowd of sweet-spicy masculines is restraint. The tobacco note reads natural, almost botanical, rather than artificially sweetened. And the osmanthus tucked into the heart adds an apricot-like fruitiness that most people never consciously notice but would miss if it were gone. That hidden detail is the mark of a perfumer who trusts subtlety.
The Evolution
The first spray is all cinnamon fire and black pepper bite. Sharp, warm, attention-getting. Within twenty minutes, the spice retreats and tobacco takes the stage, wrapped in thin veils of incense smoke. Osmanthus adds a subtle apricot sweetness that softens the composition's edges. By hour two, vanilla and tonka bean create a creamy, almost gourmand warmth, anchored by patchouli, cedar, and vetiver so the sweetness never cloys. The drydown lingers twelve hours or more.
Cultural Impact
Herod helped establish Parfums de Marly as a serious contender in the niche masculine space, moving the house beyond its initial perception as a luxury novelty. It became a gateway fragrance for enthusiasts discovering the tobacco-vanilla category beyond Tom Ford's Tobacco Vanille, and remains one of the most recommended fragrances in online communities. The name itself, evoking ancient royalty, helped define PDM's marketing identity as a house of power fragrances with historical gravitas.
The House
France · Est. 2009
Parfums de Marly resurrects the opulent spirit of 18th-century French royalty for the modern world. The house is famous for its bold, powerful fragrances that blend classical elegance with contemporary flair, all inspired by the lavish lifestyle and passion for perfume at the court of King Louis XV.
The Creator
Olivier PescheuxParfums de Marly draws inspiration from the perfumed court of King Louis XV, when fragrance was as much a symbol of power as any crown. The house blends 18th-century French perfumery traditions with modern compositions, and Herod represents the masculine side of that vision: warm, commanding, and built to endure.
If this were a song
Community picks
Herod's sonic identity lives at the intersection of old-world confidence and modern magnetism. Smoky vocals, deliberate tempos, and a sense of quiet power that mirrors the tobacco-vanilla DNA.
Feeling Good
Nina Simone






















