What a delightful book! Leave it to someone who studied both ancient history and physics in college to bring together the best possible history of the world told through jewels. Raden mashed together many disciplines to bring you the story of how jewels affected the world. I will list some highlights, but they won't do this book justice. Each section, no matter what jewel was analyzed, dove deep in not only how that jewel was discovered or cultivated, it also provided a delicious glimpse into the psyche of people, and groups of people, in history and the different things they tried to signal about their worth by wearing jewels. The sections almost always included some type of power struggle or political intrigue that was associated with the jewel in question. Most satisfying was the inclusion of brief and simple, yet wonderful, scientific descriptions of all the jewels. This book is a curious persons dream come true.
Highlights:
- New York was bought for glass beads given to the Lenape. Many people argue that this deal was extremely exploitive to the natives. Raden argued that glass beads could very well have been as valuable, if not more valuable, as diamonds to the natives because they had no access to glassblowing technology and the glass beads raised their status in society in a way similar to how diamonds raise the status of people today.
- The tulip caused the first stock market crash. Some tulips cost as much as a home, and people actually mortgaged their homes to buy a single bulb. Things only got worse from there.
- The section on diamonds began with a quote from the former chairman of Debeers, "Diamonds are intrinsically worthless except for the deep psychological need the fulfill." Diamonds are not forever and they are not a precious stone. In fact, they can be destroyed rather easily and they are so common that they are a semi-precious stone at best. Raden explains in detail how the cultivation of diamonds as a staple for couples was the greatest con game of all time. Even if you have heard this story many times before, Raden tells it so well.
- When Cleopatra met Julius Caesar, she laid on a bed of emeralds. This is how Caesar learned that jewels could be far more than just ornaments. Jewels represented power and wealth. After Cleopatra was killed, her emeralds (an actual rare stone) were captured and served as one of the highest symbols of wealth in Rome. No wonder. Emeralds are so rare because they literally need the earth to move in order to be created. Different chemicals necessary for making emeralds are locked in tectonic plates. Only the violent crashing together of these plates can make an emerald. Even then, it might not be a vivid green. (This whole section was spellbinding)
- What later was called the Hope Diamond began as a necklace that once had a much larger diamond. That necklace which no one, not even royalty, could afford ended up being the thing that brought down Marie Antoinette. I had never quite heard the story told in such a complete and captivating manner. I wish Raden had been consulted for the 2006 movie about Antoinette. It would have been all the better for her perspective and story telling ability.
- The Romanovs were included in this book. I could be wrong. After all, I did listen to audible version while dozing off. Even though I rewound the next day, I do not recall any mention of the jewel encrusted underwear that made the murders of the Romanov children a 100 times more gruesome than they were already going to be. It seemed perfect for this book and I was shocked to not read about the fact that the Romanov children had sewn their jewels into the underwear in order to not have the jewels taken from them, and as a result, when they were stabbed, the jewels stopped the knife from going all the way in. Thus, the murders took much longer and involved more force and more suffering than if the murderers could have just killed them in a swift manner.
- She saved the pearl for last. Are we really wearing viruses around our necks and on our ears? Yep. Pretty much. Like every other jewel, the pearl caused quite a war between the people trying to sell them. In the end, a brilliant and persistent man, who learned how to cultivate the perfect pearls won in all the ways that mattered. Great story.