Lapis lazuli explained

Lapis lazuli
Type:Metamorphic
Composition:Lazurite
Composition Secondary:A mixture of other minerals, often including pyrite

Lapis lazuli (;), or lapis for short, is a deep-blue metamorphic rock used as a semi-precious stone that has been prized since antiquity for its intense color. Originating from the Persian word for the gem, lāžward,[1] lapis lazuli is a rock composed primarily of the minerals lazurite, pyrite and calcite. As early as the 7th millennium BC, lapis lazuli was mined in the Sar-i Sang mines,[2] in Shortugai, and in other mines in Badakhshan province in modern northeast Afghanistan.[3] Lapis lazuli artifacts, dated to 7570 BC, have been found at Bhirrana, which is the oldest site of Indus Valley civilisation.[4] Lapis was highly valued by the Indus Valley Civilisation (3300–1900 BC).[5] [6] Lapis beads have been found at Neolithic burials in Mehrgarh, the Caucasus, and as far away as Mauritania. It was used in the funeral mask of Tutankhamun (1341–1323 BC).[7]

By the end of the Middle Ages, lapis lazuli began to be exported to Europe, where it was ground into powder and made into the pigment, ultramarine. Ultramarine was used by some of the most important artists of the Renaissance and Baroque, including Masaccio, Perugino, Titian and Vermeer, and was often reserved for the clothing of the central figures of their paintings, especially the Virgin Mary. Ultramarine has also been found in dental tartar of medieval nuns and scribes, perhaps as a result of licking their painting brushes while producing medieval texts and manuscripts.[8]

History

Excavations from Tepe Gawra show that Lapis lazuli was introduced to Mesopotamia approximately in the late Ubaid period, c. 4900–4000 BCE[9] . A traditional understanding was that the lapis was mined some fifteen hundred miles to the east – in Badakhshan. Indeed, the Persian Persian: لاژورد, also written Persian: لاجورد, is commonly interpreted as having an origin in a local place name.

From the Persian, the Arabic Arabic: لازورد is the etymological source of both the English word azure (via Old French azur) and Medieval Latin Latin: lazulum, which came to mean 'heaven' or 'sky'. To disambiguate, Latin: lapis lazulī ("stone of Latin: lazulum") was used to refer to the stone itself, and is the term ultimately imported into Middle English.[10] Latin: Lazulum is etymologically related to the color blue, and used as a root for the word for blue in several languages, including Spanish and Portuguese Spanish; Castilian: azul.[11]

Mines in northeast Afghanistan continue to be a major source of lapis lazuli. Important amounts are also produced from mines west of Lake Baikal in Russia, and in the Andes mountains in Chile which is the source that the Inca used to carve artifacts and jewelry. Smaller quantities are mined in Pakistan, Italy, Mongolia, the United States, and Canada.[12]

Science and uses

Composition

The most important mineral component of lapis lazuli is lazurite[13] (25% to 40%), a blue feldspathoid silicate mineral of the sodalite family, with the formula .[14] Most lapis lazuli also contains calcite (white), and pyrite (metallic yellow). Some samples of lapis lazuli contain augite, diopside, enstatite, mica, hauynite, hornblende, nosean, and sulfur-rich löllingite geyerite.

Lapis lazuli usually occurs in crystalline marble as a result of contact metamorphism.

Color

The intense blue color is due to the presence of the trisulfur radical anion in the crystal.[15] The presence of disulfur and tetrasulfur radicals can shift the color towards yellow or red, respectively.[16] These radical anions substitute for the chloride anions within the sodalite structure.[17] The radical anion exhibits a visible absorption band in the range 595–620 nm with high molar absorptivity, leading to its bright blue color.[18]

Sources

Lapis lazuli is found in limestone in the Kokcha River valley of Badakhshan province in north-eastern Afghanistan, where the Sar-i Sang mine deposits have been worked for more than 6,000 years. Afghanistan was the source of lapis for the ancient Persian, Egyptian and Mesopotamian civilizations, as well as the later Greeks and Romans. Ancient Egyptians obtained the material through trade with Mesopotamians, as part of Egypt–Mesopotamia relations. During the height of the Indus Valley civilisation, approximately 2000 BC, the Harappan colony, now known as Shortugai, was established near the lapis mines.

In addition to the Afghan deposits, lapis is also extracted in the Andes (near Ovalle, Chile); and to the west of Lake Baikal in Siberia, Russia, at the Tultui lazurite deposit. It is mined in smaller amounts in Angola, Argentina, Burma, Pakistan, Canada, Italy, India, and in the United States in California and Colorado.[12]

Uses and substitutes

Lapis takes an excellent polish and can be made into jewellery, carvings, boxes, mosaics, ornaments, small statues, and vases. Interior items and finishing buildings can be also made with lapis. During the Renaissance, lapis was ground and processed to make the pigment ultramarine for use in frescoes and oil painting. Its usage as a pigment in oil paint largely ended during the early 19th century, when a chemically identical synthetic variety became available.

Lapis lazuli is commercially synthesized or simulated by the Gillson process, which is used to make artificial ultramarine and hydrous zinc phosphates.[19] Spinel or sodalite, or dyed jasper or howlite, can be substituted for lapis.[20]

History and art

In the ancient world

Lapis lazuli has been mined in Afghanistan and exported to the Mediterranean world and South Asia since the Neolithic age,[21] [22] along the ancient trade route between Afghanistan and the Indus Valley dating to the 7th millennium BC. Quantities of these beads have also been found at 4th millennium BC settlements in Northern Mesopotamia, and at the Bronze Age site of Shahr-e Sukhteh in southeast Iran (3rd millennium BC). A dagger with a lapis handle, a bowl inlaid with lapis, amulets, beads, and inlays representing eyebrows and beards, were found in the Royal Tombs of the Sumerian city-state of Ur from the 3rd millennium BC.[21]

Lapis was also used in ancient Persia, Mesopotamia by the Akkadians, Assyrians, and Babylonians for seals and jewelry. It is mentioned several times in the Mesopotamian poem, the Epic of Gilgamesh (17th–18th century BC), one of the oldest known works of literature. The Statue of Ebih-Il, a 3rd millennium BC statue found in the ancient city-state of Mari in modern-day Syria, now in the Louvre, uses lapis lazuli inlays for the irises of the eyes.[23]

In ancient Egypt, lapis lazuli was a favorite stone for amulets and ornaments such as scarabs. Lapis jewellery has been found at excavations of the Predynastic Egyptian site Naqada (3300–3100 BC). At Karnak, the relief carvings of Thutmose III (1479–1429 BC) show fragments and barrel-shaped pieces of lapis lazuli being delivered to him as tribute. Powdered lapis was used as eyeshadow by Cleopatra.[24]

Jewelry made of lapis lazuli has also been found at Mycenae attesting to relations between the Myceneans and the developed civilizations of Egypt and the East.[25]

Pliny the Elder wrote that lapis lazuli is "opaque and sprinkled with specks of gold".  Because the stone combines the blue of the heavens and golden glitter of the sun, it was emblematic of success in the old Jewish tradition. In the early Christian tradition lapis lazuli was regarded as the stone of Virgin Mary.

In late classical times and as late as the Middle Ages, lapis lazuli was often called sapphire (sapphirus in Latin, sappir in Hebrew),[26] though it had little to do with the stone today known as the blue corundum variety sapphire. In his book on stones, the Greek scientist Theophrastus described "the sapphirus, which is speckled with gold," a description which matches lapis lazuli.[27]

There are many references to "sapphire" in the Old Testament, but most scholars agree that, since sapphire was not known before the Roman Empire, they most likely are references to lapis lazuli. For instance, Exodus 24:10: "And they saw the God of Israel, and there was under his feet as it were a paved work of a sapphire stone..." (KJV). The words used in the Latin Vulgate Bible in this citation are "quasi opus lapidis sapphirini", the terms for lapis lazuli.[28] Modern translations of the Bible, such as the New Living Translation Second Edition,[29] refer to lapis lazuli in most instances instead of sapphire.

Vermeer

Johannes Vermeer used lapis lazuli paint, in the Girl with a Pearl Earring painting.[30] [31]

Yeats

The poet, William Butler Yeats, describes a figurine of sculpted lapis lazuli in a poem entitled "Lapis Lazuli". The sculpture of three men from China, a bird, and a musical instrument serves in the poem as a reminder of "gaiety" in the face of tragedy.[32]

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: lapis lazuli . 6 April 2024 . Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary.
  2. David Bomford and Ashok Roy, A Closer Look- Colour (2009), National Gallery Company, London,
  3. Book: Moorey, Peter Roger. Ancient Mesopotamian Materials and Industries: the Archaeological Evidence. 1999. Eisenbrauns. 978-1-57506-042-2. 86–87. 2020-11-08. 2015-10-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20151003232804/https://books.google.com/books?id=P_Ixuott4doC&pg=PA86&dq=Lapis+lazuli+++mines+in+the+Badakhshan&hl=en&ei=sW6_TvWKBIKr8AOTn623BA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&sqi=2&ved=0CDkQ6AEwAQ. live.
  4. Web site: Excavation Bhirrana ASI Nagpur. 2020-08-21. excnagasi.in. 2020-08-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20200804104933/http://excnagasi.in/excavation_bhirrana.html. live.
  5. Sarkar. Anindya. Mukherjee. Arati Deshpande. Bera. M. K.. Das. B.. Juyal. Navin. Morthekai. P.. Deshpande. R. D.. Shinde. V. S.. Rao. L. S.. 2016-05-25. Oxygen isotope in archaeological bioapatites from India: Implications to climate change and decline of Bronze Age Harappan civilization. Scientific Reports. en. 6. 1. 26555. 10.1038/srep26555. 27222033. 4879637. 2016NatSR...626555S. 4425978. 2045-2322. free.
  6. DIKSHIT. K.N.. The Rise of Indian Civilization: Recent Archaeological Evidence from the Plains of 'Lost' River Saraswati and Radio-Metric Dates. 2012. Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute. 72/73. 1–42. 43610686. 0045-9801.
  7. Alessandro Bongioanni & Maria Croce
  8. Web site: Why a Medieval Woman Had Lapis Lazuli Hidden in Her Teeth . Sarah . Zhang . . January 9, 2019 . May 9, 2020 . May 8, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200508110154/https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/01/the-woman-with-lapis-lazuli-in-her-teeth/579760/ . live .
  9. Herrmann . Georgina . April 1968 . Lapis Lazuli: The Early Phases of its Trade . IRAQ . en . 30 . 1 . 21–57 . 10.2307/4199836 . 0021-0889.
  10. Book: Senning, Alexander . Elsevier's Dictionary of Chemoetymology . Elsevier . 2007 . 978-0-444-52239-9 . Amsterdam . 224 . lapis lazuli (lazurite) . limited.
  11. Book: Weekley, Ernest . An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English . Dover Publications . 1967 . New York . 97 . azure . registration.
  12. Web site: Lapis Lazuli. International Colored Gemstone Association. www.gemstone.org. 2020-02-13. 2020-03-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20200321162641/https://www.gemstone.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=117%3Asapphire&catid=1%3Agem-by-gem&Itemid=14. live.
  13. Web site: Lapis lazuli: Mineral information, data and localities.. www.mindat.org. 2020-02-13. 2020-01-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20200129083053/https://www.mindat.org/min-2330.html. live.
  14. Web site: Lazurite: Mineral information, data and localities.. www.mindat.org. 2020-02-13. 2020-04-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20200403042835/https://www.mindat.org/min-2357.html. live.
  15. Boros . E. . Earle . M. J. . Gilea . M. A. . Metlen . A. . Mudring . A.-V. . Rieger . F. . Robertson . A. J. . Seddon . K. R. . Tomaszowska . A. A. . Trusov . L. . Vyle . J. S. . 2010 . On the dissolution of non-metallic solid elements (sulfur, selenium, tellurium and phosphorus) in ionic liquids . Chem. Comm. . 46 . 5 . 716–718 . 10.1039/b910469k . 20087497 . 2018-04-20 . 2017-09-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170922042128/https://works.bepress.com/anja_mudring/33/download/ . live .
  16. Ganio . Monica . Pouyet . Emeline S. . Webb . Samuel M. . Patterson . Catherine M. Schmidt . Walton . Marc S. . 2018-03-01 . From lapis lazuli to ultramarine blue: investigating Cennino Cennini's recipe using sulfur K-edge XANES . Pure and Applied Chemistry . en . 90 . 3 . 463–475 . 10.1515/pac-2017-0502 . 102593589 . 1365-3075 . free .
  17. Reinen . Dirk . Lindner . Gottlieb-Georg . 1999-01-01 . The nature of the chalcogen colour centres in ultramarine-type solids . Chemical Society Reviews . en . 28 . 2 . 75–84 . 10.1039/A704920J . 1460-4744 . 2022-06-16 . 2022-06-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220616174412/https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/1999/CS/a704920j . live .
  18. Chivers . Tristram . Elder . Philip J. W. . 2013-06-21 . Ubiquitous trisulfur radical anion: fundamentals and applications in materials science, electrochemistry, analytical chemistry and geochemistry . Chemical Society Reviews . en . 42 . 14 . 5996–6005 . 10.1039/C3CS60119F . 23628896 . 1460-4744 . 2022-06-16 . 2022-06-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220616174349/https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2013/cs/c3cs60119f . live .
  19. Read, Peter (2005). Gemmology , Elsevier, p. 185. .
  20. http://www.gemstonebuzz.com/lapis-lazuli Lapis lazuli
  21. Book: Moorey, Peter Roger. Ancient mesopotamian materials and industries: the archaeological evidence. 1999. Eisenbrauns. 978-1-57506-042-2. 86–87. 2020-11-08. 2015-10-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20151003232804/https://books.google.com/books?id=P_Ixuott4doC&pg=PA86&dq=Lapis+lazuli+++mines+in+the+Badakhshan&hl=en&ei=sW6_TvWKBIKr8AOTn623BA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&sqi=2&ved=0CDkQ6AEwAQ. live.
  22. News: A complete guide to Gemstones. Monthly. Jewellery. 2015-04-02. Jewellery & Watch Magazine Jewellery news, jewellery fashion and trends, jewellery designer reviews, jewellery education, opinions Wrist watch reviews. 2017-08-28. en-GB. 2017-08-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20170828191332/http://www.jewellerymonthly.com/what-is-a-gemstone/. live.
  23. Web site: Ebih-Il, the Superintendent of Mari. Claire. Iselin. Musée du Louvre. 10 October 2012. 30 December 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121230075703/http://www.louvre.fr/en/oeuvre-notices/ebih-il-superintendent-mari. live.
  24. http://indianapublicmedia.org/amomentofscience/cleopatra-wear-makeup/
  25. Alcestis Papademetriou, Mycenae, John S. Latsis Public Benefit Foundation, 2015, p. 32.
  26. Book: Schumann, Walter . trans. Annette Englander & Daniel Shea . Gemstones of the World . 2002 . Newly revised & expanded 3rd . 2006 . Sterling . New York . 102 . Sapphire . In antiquity and as late as the Middle Ages, the name sapphire was understood to mean what is today described as lapis lazuli..
  27. Theophrastus, On Stones (De Lapidibus) – IV-23, translated by D.E. Eichholtz, Oxford University Press, 1965.
  28. Pearlie Braswell-Tripp (2013), Real Diamonds and Precious Stones of the Bible
  29. "In His Image Devotional Bible"
  30. Web site: Vermeer's Palette: Natural Ultramarine . 2022-06-23 . 2021-11-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211123183602/http://www.essentialvermeer.com/palette/palette_ultramarine.html . live .
  31. Out of the blue: Vermeer's use of ultramarine in Girl with a Pearl Earring . 2020 . 10.1186/s40494-020-00364-5 . Van Loon . Annelies . Gambardella . Alessa A. . Gonzalez . Victor . Cotte . Marine . De Nolf . Wout . Keune . Katrien . Leonhardt . Emilien . De Groot . Suzan . Proaño Gaibor . Art Ness . Vandivere . Abbie . Heritage Science . 8 . 211540737 . free .
  32. Labistour . Marion . Yeats . W. B. . 1966 . Lapis Lazuli . Critical Survey . 3 . 1 . 13–16 . 0011-1570.