| Silk,
with its shimmer and
lustre -- no other fabric
can match
the qualities of this
rich fabric
The
Origin of Silk
Fabric
Silk production, or
'Sericulture' as it
is known, has a long
history. The history
of silk is shrouded
in mystery. Some historians
say that silk originated
in China about 10,000
years ago. In China,
however, legend has
that Empress Si Ling
Chi of China was the
first one to discover
silk more than 5,000
years ago. The story
goes that while sitting
under a mulberry tree
in her palace garden,
the Empress was having
tea. A cocoon fell into
her hot cup of tea from
the branches of the
mulberry tree. And as
she watched, a strong
white thread unraveled
itself.
That
accidental process of
unravelling the silkworm's
cocoon hasn't changed
much in the last thousands
of years. Cocoons are
still dipped in hot
water to loosen the
tightly woven filaments
that make up a silkworm's
cocoon. These filaments,
or fine threads, are
unwound onto a spool.
Each cocoon is made
up of a filament between
600 and 900 meters long!
You could take just
one tiny cocoon and
unravel its filament,
and you could wind it
around your house more
than eight times. Of
course, these filaments
are very very thin.
Between five and eight
of these super-fine
filaments are twisted
together to make one
silk thread.
By
the 14th century BC,
the production of silk
gradually developed
into an industry in
China. In fact it became
one of the principal
elements of the Chinese
economy. Silk was being
used for musical instruments,
fishing-lines, bowstrings,
and even rag paper,
the world's first luxury
paper.
For more than two thousand
years, the Chinese kept
the secret of silk to
themselves. It was one
of the most zealously
guarded secrets in history.
Anyone found guilty
of smuggling silkworm
eggs, cocoons, or mulberry
seeds was put to death.
Silk became the cloth
of emperors and royalty
and a great source of
wealth. Within the palace,
the emperor used to
adorn a robe of white
silk while outside,
he, his principal wife,
and the heir to the
throne wore yellow,
the color of the earth.
Common people were prohibited
from wearing silk.
The
Chinese used silk in
many ways. Civil servants
were paid in quantities
of silk, and it was
a way for the rulers
to reward their subjects.
Silk was also used as
currency in domestic
as well as foreign trade.
After all, barter trade
was the most common
way of trading. So Chinese
traders exchanged their
silk in return for spices
and jewels bought in
India.
Gradually,
people from different
sections of society
began wearing tunics
of silk, and silk came
into more general use.
The
Secret of Silk Gets
Out
In
200 BC (about 2200 years
ago), a large number
of people migrated from
China and settled in
Korea. They carried
with them the secret
of silk production.
From then on, the secret
of silk slowly traveled
throughout Asia. It
took about five hundred
years for the knowledge
of silk production to
reach India. But once
it did, India soon started
trading silk with the
Persians. However, in
less than a hundred
years, the Persians
too had mastered the
art of silk weaving,
and started developing
their own rich patterns
and techniques.
It
was only as late as
the 13th century AD
that Italy began silk
production, with the
introduction of 2000
skilled silk weavers
from Persia (only about
700 years ago).
Eventually,
silk production became
widespread in Europe,
but the widespread production
of silk hasn't dented
China's image as the
Silk Giant. Even today,
5,000 years after the
first cocoon fell into
the Empress' teacup,
China is still the world's
largest producer of
silk. |