Silver Facts


by Eric Hartwell - Date: 2007-03-22 - Word Count: 257 Share This!

Silver the Metal

Silver, used in its raw form, is about 99.9% pure and is too soft for producing large durable objects which is why in Sterling silver, copper is alloyed with the silver metal to give the metal strength while retaining the same physical characteristics of ductility and high metal content of fine silver.

Origin of Sterling

Silver sterling was a term coined in England during the 13th century. There are several sources of the term sterling and one of these is when it was first mentioned as sterilensis in 1070 AD. Sterling silver then started appearing more frequently in the history books by 1200 AD. The origin of sterling is known to come from esterlin (Old Norman French) which means little star and steire (Old English) which means strong, immovable and firm.

How Sterling Silver Was Introduced in Households

Sterling Silver was initially popularized during the period of 1840 to 1940 in the US and Europe. The hype with silver started with flatwares which became the standard when setting the table in any household. During the Victorian period, the number of courses increased from three to ten or more courses. Even the forks, spoons and knives used were customized to match the courses offered.

Slowly the silver craze was extended to other objects used both in offices and homes. But by World War II, the costs increased so much so that sterling fell out of favor around that time. At that point, only the well-off could afford to maintain the number of servants required for the ten courses served during meals.


Related Tags: gold, jewelry, ring, necklace, earrings, jewellery, jewels, bracelet, silver

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