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Ch. 4: Fabulous Stones and Fossils

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186         THE MAGIC OF JEWELS AND CHAEMS
improbable, still there is abundant unmistakable evidence that very large pieces have really occasionally been found. In Rome and in the Santa Casa of Loreto costly and artistic­ally shaped pieces of ambergris were to be seen, which clearly indicated that the weight of the original unworked mass must have greatly exceeded that of the ornamental object. There can be no doubt of the authenticity of the de­tails regarding a great piece of ambergris weighing 182 pounds bought in the year 1693 from King Fidori by the Dutch East India Company for 11,000 rigsdalers or nearly $12,000 at the current valuation of the coin of that time. In form it resembled a tortoise-shell, was 5 feet 8 inches thick, and 2 feet 2 inches long. After being long kept in Amster­dam as a curiosity, and having been viewed there by thou­sands of persons, it was finally broken up and sold at auc­tion.61 A lump extracted from a whale in the Windward Islands weighed 130 pounds and was sold for $3500, or nearly $27 a pound.
The livers of certain animals provided concretions called haraczi by the Arabs; these were much used as remedies for epilepsy. The Turkish butchers, when slaughtering ani­mals, always examined the livers carefully so as to secure these stones. As the Jews were said to suffer much from melancholia and epileptic disorders they valued the liver-stones very highly.62
The use of fossils as talismans and for the cure of diseases was mainly due to their strange and various forms. As color played the most important part in the case of precious stones, each color being looked upon as possessing a certain symbolic significance fitting the stone for some special use or uses, so in the case of fossils the form was
β Caspar Neumann, " Disquisitio de ambra grysea," Dresden, 173R, pp. 80, 81.
" Gimma, " Cella storia naturale delle gemme," Napoli, 1730, vol. i, p. 479.
Ch. 4: Fabulous Stones and Fossils Page of 485 Ch. 4: Fabulous Stones and Fossils
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