Seeing is believing: The colour of silver alloys and the global silver circulation in the Chinese Ming and Qing dynasties

Author:

Sun Lin1ORCID,Yang Gongle1,Guo Rui2,Ren Xinxing3,Pollard Mark4,Liu Ruiliang5

Affiliation:

1. School of History Beijing Normal University Beijing China

2. Xi'an Institute of Archaeology and Conservation on Cultural Heritage Xi'an China

3. Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering Brunel University London London UK

4. School of Archaeology University of Oxford Oxford UK

5. Department of Asia British Museum London UK

Abstract

AbstractThis research investigates the correlation between colour perception and the circulation of silver in China during the Ming (1368–1644 CE) and Qing (1644–1911 CE) dynasties. The primary aim is to deepen our understanding of how silver alloys were perceived and experienced in this historical context while also situating our study within the broader context of the global silver trade. During the Ming and Qing dynasties, silver possessed immense historical significance as a precious commodity. We argue that copper had a more substantial influence on the final colour of silver alloys compared to lead. Furthermore, employing a colourimetric model, our Monte‐Carlo simulation demonstrates that over 70% of silver from Mesoamerica to China could be discerned by nonexperts using only their unaided vision, largely due to the elevated copper content. Crucially, our simulation experiment reveals differing effects of copper and lead on the colour of silver alloys. The latter demonstrates minimal change until reaching a threshold of 15%, signifying that lead is a suitable and cost‐effective substitute for silver. These findings suggest that the detection of silver purity was less demanding than previously assumed, opening up opportunities for arbitrage.

Funder

National Social Science Fund of China

Publisher

Wiley

Reference20 articles.

1. The Origins of the Indian Coinage Tradition

2. The earliest silver currency hoards in the Southern Levant: Metal trade in the transition from the Middle to the Late Bronze Age

3. The colour of copper alloys;Fang J.‐L.;Historical Metallurgy,2011

4. Hao B.(1985).关于周代使用银币的探索 Exploration of use of silver currency in the Zhou dynasty. Chinese numismatic conference.

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