Products of the sea - pearls.

Name/Title

Products of the sea - pearls.

Entry/Object ID

Library.642

Tags

Library Rare books collection as of June 4 2023

Description

[2], 16 leaves; 28 cm Includes bibliography. Writers Program (Fla.). It was a little remembered Chinaman, one Ye-jin-Yang, who first learned how pearls were made. That was in the thirteenth century and today, near the city of Teh-tsing, there are several villages whose inhabitants still use Ye-jin-Yan's old methods to induce the growth of pearls in river mussels. (1) Since then Baron Mikimoto, of Japan, devised a better way of producing what are known as "culture" pearls and, in America, La Place Bostwick has experimented with various mollusks very successfully. At Key West one of the queen conchs, with which he was experimenting, produced a gem valued at $3,000. (2) Before the days of cultured pearls men obtained natural pearls from mussels and oysters. Because of their great beauty, pearls were highly esteemed even from the very earliest times and by people in widely separated countries. Columbus found that pearl fishing was one of the occupations of the inhabitants of the New World. (1) The gold- smiths of Paris, in 1355, made rulings which mentioned pearls from Scotland. Pearls were used to adorn a breast plate which Julius Caesar dedicated to Venus Genetrix and some writers believe that the Romans may have been thinking about pearl treasures when they invaded Britain. (1) (4: p. 389)

Collection

Library

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Book

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Other Documents

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

Search Terms

Pearl oysters., Pearl fisheries - History., Pearls - History.

Publication Details

Author

Writers' Program (Fla.), Florida. Dept. of Public Instruction. Carmody, John M. (John Michael) 1881-1962. United States Federal Works Agency. United States Work Projects Administration (Fla.).

Edition

Typescript

Publisher

Publisher not identified.

Place Published

* Untyped Place Published

Place of publication not identified.

Call No.

Rare Book QL 430.7 .P77 W8