Who knows what is the blue stone in the Egyptian jewelry?

April 14th, 2010

I have a necklace from Egypt, and it brought a blue stone with an eye. Hope someone can tell me what the stone is called.

5 Responses to “Who knows what is the blue stone in the Egyptian jewelry?”

  1. iliandraeq says:

    Lapis lazuli, also referred to simply as Lapis is a stone with one of the longest traditions of being as a piece of jewelry with a BC history dates back to 5000. Deep blue in color and opaque, this gemstone was especially appreciated by the Pharaohs of ancient Egypt, to see how to recover through its prominent use in many of the treasures from pharaonic tombs. Today it is still very populär.Lapis is a rock, and not a mineral because it is different from other minerals. A true mineral it would have a constituent nur.Der first part of the name is the Latin lapis, ie stone. The second part, lapis lazuli, is the genitive form of the medieval Latin lazulum, from the Arabic (al-) came lazward that came from the Persian lāzhward لاژورد. This was originally a place name, but soon came to mean blue because of its connection with the stone. Azure English, Spanish azul, Italian Azzurro is also clear from this source. Taken as a whole, lapis lazuli means stone of the Azure.

  2. raredawn says:

    Now there are two stones, it is likely to be lapis or turquoise. Egyptian Jewelry suspect I would probably lapis. Lapis is a deep blue rule

  3. Heather P says:

    Lapis lazuli, also referred to simply as Lapis is a stone with one of the longest traditions of being as a piece of jewelry with a BC history dates back to 5000. Deep blue in color and opaque, this gemstone was especially appreciated by the Pharaohs of ancient Egypt, to see how to recover through its prominent use in many of the treasures from pharaonic tombs.

  4. Marvin R says:

    Lapis, I think, is the stone when it is a deep blue color refers, if it is maybe a light blue turquoise.

  5. shoveling_ferret says:

    Like the previous responder, lapis lazuli or turquoise stones are mentioned the most likely to become a real part of your necklace. While lapis lazuli is found in Egypt has not actually popular in ancient Egypt, and so has continued for jewelry sold to tourists popular. Turquoise comes primarily from the Sinai (or did in ancient times) and so was / is also a popular Stein.Es is a possibility that what you have is not a stone but a material called faience. It is a quartz-frit-based substance that is triggered and produces a glaze. Depending on other additives, it can be blue, green, red, blue, etc., or blue-green colors were very popular for faience in ancient Egypt and a number of pottery objects were also amulets, inlays, statuettes, vessels, etc. produced material that faience are also imitate popular in modern jewelry.

RSS feed for comments on this post. And trackBack URL.

Leave a Reply

Powered by Yahoo! Answers