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Ch. 13: Value & Commerce of Pearls

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XIII
VALUES AND COMMERCE OF PEARLS
A pearl, Whose price hath launch'd above a thousand ships, And turn'd crown'd kings to merchants."
Troilus and Cressida, Act II, sc. 2.
T O trace the markets of the pearl is to trace the routes of comĀ­merce from early times. The first routes from the Far East seem to have been two: one by the Persian Gulf and the Euphrates to Babylonia and Assyria, and thence by caravan through Damascus to Tyre and Sidon; the other by the Red Sea and Suez to Egypt. As regards the former route, Sir George Birdwood furnishes positive evidence that the Phenicians visited India as early as 2200 b.c. It seems highly probable that pearls were introduced by this route at an early period, although it is difficult to find material proof of the fact.
By means of this commerce, the great ancient civilizations of Phenicia, Mesapotamia and the Nile valley doubtless became familiar with the gem treasures of eastern Asia. Then came the opening of the Mediterranean with first "the great Sidon," and later Tyre, as the starting-points of commerce, exploration, and colonial settlement among the islands and on the shores of what, to the Asiatic peoples, was the great western sea. However, as the Greek islands and their colonies developed, the Phenicians were more strictly confined to the coasts of Africa and Spain. Gades, Tartessus, and Carthage were their great colonies and trading-ports, and their adventurous sailors passed on through the Straits of Gibraltar and directed their course northward to the British Isles, where they very probably obtained the pearls of the Scotch rivers.
Meanwhile, the campaigns of Alexander had carried Greek influĀ­ence and authority over all western Asia, reaching even to India itself, and had led to a widely increased intercourse. Although he died at the age of thirty-two, Alexander the Great did more than any single individual in the world's history to bring the nations of the Eastern and the Western worlds into contact with each other, and it is cer-
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Ch. 13: Value & Commerce of Pearls Page of 650 Ch. 13: Value & Commerce of Pearls
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