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Peridot
Known by the ancient Egyptians as the “gem of the sun,” peridot has enjoyed
a mystical reputation with its alleged powers including: warding off anxiety,
enhancement of speech articulation, and success in relationships and marriage.
Common in early Greek and Roman jewelry, peridot has been popular since
1500 BC when the Egyptians started mining it on Zeberget, later known
as St. John’s Island, about 50 miles off the Egyptian coast in the Red
Sea. It was a dangerous business back then as the island was infested
with poisonous serpents, which a later Pharaoh had driven into the sea.
Peridot mining was traditionally done
at night when the stone’s natural glow is easier to see, the ancient Egyptians
even believed that peridots became invisible under the sun’s rays.
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Hawaiian natives believe
peridot is the goddess Pele's tears, while biblical references to the
stone include the high priest's breastplate studded with a stone for
each of the twelve tribes of Israel, one being peridot. Cleopatra reportedly
had a fine collection of “emerald” jewelry, which was really peridot but
it was the Ottoman Sultans who gathered the largest collection during
their 600-year reign from 1300-1918, with an impressive array of both
loose gem stones as well as peridot earrings, peridot rings and other
peridot jewelry.
Powdered peridot has been used to cure asthma and a peridot placed under
the tongue of someone in the grip of a fever will lessen their thirst.
Legend has it that drinking from a peridot goblet can increase the potency
of medicines.
Pirate’s believed peridot had the power to drive away evil spirits (and
the night’s terrors), especially if set in gold. But as protection from
evil spirits it must be pierced, strung on donkey hair and worn on the
left arm.
Possibly the most unusual peridot is that which comes from meteorites
called pallasites. Some have even been facetted and set in jewelry, the
only extraterrestrial gemstones known to man.
Peridot ranges in color from light yellow-green to the intense bright
green of new grass to olive. Because of the way peridot splits and bends
the rays of light passing through it, it has a velvety, "sleepy" appearance
- a shining rich glow, and a slightly greasy luster.
The purer green a peridot is, the higher the value. Any tinge of brown
greatly diminishes the price as well as visible flaws.
In 1994, an exciting new deposit of peridot was discovered in Pakistan,
and these stones are among the finest ever seen. The new mine is located
15,000 feet above sea level in the Nanga Parbat region in the far west
of the Himalayan Mountains in the Pakistani part of Kashmir. Beautiful
large crystals of peridot were found, some that cut magnificent large
gemstones. One stone was more than 300 carats!
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