
What is Jade and what is it’s history?
What is jade?
Jade is a mineral, much used in some cultures as jewellery and for ornaments, mostly known for its green varieties, though it appears naturally in other colours as well, notably yellow and white. Jade can refer to either of two different silicate minerals: nephrite (a silicate of calcium and magnesium in the amphibole group of minerals), or jadeite (a silicate of sodium and aluminium in the pyroxene group of minerals).
Jade is well known for its use in East Asian, South Asian, and Southeast Asian art.
Jade also has an important place in Latin America such as Mexico and Guatemala. The use of jade in Mesoamerica for symbolic and ideological ritual was highly influenced by its rarity and value among pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures, such as the Olmec, the Maya, and the various groups in the Valley of Mexico. Although jade artifacts have been created and prized by many Mesoamerican peoples, the Motagua River valley in Guatemala was previously thought to be the sole source of jadeite in the region.
HISTORY OF JADE and MAN
China
During Neolithic times, the key known sources of nephrite jade in China for utilitarian and ceremonial jade items were the now-depleted deposits in the Ningshao area in the Yangtze River Delta (Liangzhu culture 3400โ2250 BC) and in an area of the Liaoning province and Inner Mongolia (Hongshan culture 4700โ2200 BC). Dushan Jade was being mined as early as 6000 BC. In the Yin Ruins of the Shang Dynasty (1600 to 1050 BC) in Anyang, Dushan Jade ornaments were unearthed in the tomb of the Shang kings.
Jade was considered to be the “imperial gem” and was used to create many utilitarian and ceremonial objects, from indoor decorative items to jade burial suits. From the earliest Chinese dynasties to the present, the jade deposits most used were not only those of Khotan in the Western Chinese province of Xinjiang but other parts of China as well, such as Lantian, Shaanxi. There, white and greenish nephrite jade is found in small quarries and as pebbles and boulders in the rivers flowing from the Kuen-Lun mountain range eastward into the Takla-Makan desert area. The river jade collection is concentrated in the Yarkand, the White Jade (Yurungkash) and Black Jade (Karakash) Rivers. From the Kingdom of Khotan, on the southern leg of the Silk Road, yearly tribute payments consisting of the most precious white jade were made to the Chinese Imperial court and there worked into objets d’art by skilled artisans as jade had a status-value exceeding that of gold or silver. Jade became a favourite material for the crafting of Chinese scholars’ objects, such as rests for calligraphy brushes, as well as the mouthpieces of some opium pipes, due to the belief that breathing through jade would bestow longevity upon smokers who used such a pipe.
Jadeite, with its bright emerald-green, pink, lavender, orange and brown colours was imported from Burma to China only after about 1800. The vivid green variety became known as Feicui (็ฟก็ฟ ) or Kingfisher (feathers) Jade. It quickly became almost as popular as nephrite and a favourite of Qing Dynasty’s nouveau riche, while scholars still had strong attachment to nephrite (white jade, or Khotan), which they deemed to be the symbol of a nobleman.
In the history of the art of the Chinese empire, jade has had a special significance, comparable with that of gold and diamonds in the West. Jade was used for the finest objects and cult figures, and for grave furnishings for high-ranking members of the imperial family Due to that significance and the rising middle class in China, in 2010 the finest jade when found in nuggets of “mutton fat” jade โ so-named for its marbled white consistency โ could sell for $3,000 an ounce, a tenfold increase from a decade previously
The Chinese character ็ย (yรน) is used to denote the several types of stone known in English as “jade” (e.g. ็ๅจ, jadewares), such asย jadeiteย (็กฌ็, ‘hard jade’, another name for ็ฟก็ฟ ) andย nephriteย (่ป็, ‘soft jade’). But because of the value added culturally to jades throughout Chinese history, the word has also come to refer more generally to precious or ornamental stones,ย and is very common in more symbolic usage as in phrases like ๆ็ฃๅผ็/ๆ็ ๅผ็ (lit. “casting a brick (i.e. the speaker’s own words) to draw a jade (i.e. pearls of wisdom from the other party)”), ็ๅฎน (a beautiful face; “jade countenance”), and ็็ซ (slim and graceful; “jade standing upright”). The character has a similar range of meanings when appearing as a radical as parts of other characters.
Prehistoric and historic Japan
Jade in Japan was used for jade bracelets. It was a symbol of wealth and power. Leaders also used jade in rituals. It is the national stone of Japan.
Prehistoric and historic Korea
The use of jade and other greenstone was a long-term tradition inย Koreaย (c. 850 BC โ AD 668). Jade is found in small numbers ofย pit-housesย andย burials. The craft production of smallย comma-shaped and tubular “jades” using materials such as jade,ย microcline,ย jasper, etc., in southern Korea originates from the Middleย Mumun Pottery Periodย (c. 850โ550 BC). Comma-shaped jades are found on some of the gold crowns ofย Sillaย royalty (c. 300/400โ668 AD) and sumptuousย eliteย burials of theย Korean Three Kingdoms. After the state of Silla united the Korean Peninsula in 668, the widespread popularisation of death rituals related toย Buddhismย resulted in the decline of the use of jade in burials as prestige mortuary goods.
INDIA
The Jain temple of Kolanpak in the Nalgonda district, Telangana, India is home to a 5-foot (1.5 m) high sculpture of Mahavira that is carved entirely out of jade. India is also noted for its craftsman tradition of using large amounts of green serpentine or false jade obtained primarily from Afghanistan in order to fashion jewellery and ornamental items such as sword hilts and dagger handles.
The Salar Jung Museum in Hyderabad has a wide range of jade hilted daggers, mostly owned by the former Sultans of Hyderabad.
MYANMAR – Burma
Today, it is estimated that Myanmar is the origin of upwards of 70% of the world’s supply of high-quality jadeite. Most of the jadeite mined in Myanmar is not cut for use in Myanmar, instead being transported to other nations, primarily in Asia, for use in jewellery and other products. The jadeite deposits found in Kachinland, in Myanmar’s northern regions is the highest quality jadeite in the world, considered precious by sources in China going as far back as the 10th century.
Jadeite in Myanmar is primarily found in the “Jade Tract” located in Lonkin Township in Kachin State in northern Myanmar which encompasses the alluvial region of the Uyu River between the 25th and 26th parallels. Present-day extraction of jade in this region occurs at the Phakant-gyi, Maw Se Za, Tin Tin, and Khansee mines. Khansee is also the only mine that produces Maw Sit Sit, a type of jade. Mines at Tawmao and Hweka are mostly exhausted. From 1964 to 1981, mining was exclusively an enterprise of the Myanmar government. In 1981, 1985, and 1995, the Gemstone laws were modified to allow increasing private enterprise. In addition to this region, there are also notable mines in the neighbouring Sagaing District, near the towns of Nasibon and Natmaw and Hkamti. Sagaing is a district in Myanmar proper, not a part of the ethic Kachin State.
Taiwan, Philippines, and Maritime Southeast Asia
Carved nephrite jade was the main commodity trade during the historicalย Maritime Jade Road, an extensive trading network connecting multiple areas in Southeast and East Asia. The nephrite jade was mined in eastย Taiwanย by animist Taiwanese indigenous peoples and processed mostly in theย Philippinesย by animist indigenous Filipinos.
Some were also processed in Vietnam, while the peoples of Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, and Cambodia also participated in the massive animist-led nephrite jade trading network, where other commodities were also traded. Participants in the network at the time had a majority animist population. The maritime road is one of the most extensive sea-based trade networks of a single geological material in the prehistoric world. It was in existence for at least 3,000 years, where its peak production was from 2000 BCE to 500 CE, older than the Silk Road in mainland Eurasia. It began to wane during its final centuries from 500 CE until 1000 CE. The entire period of the network was a golden age for the diverse animist societies of the region.
Mฤori โ New Zealand
Nephrite jade in New Zealand is known as pounamu in the Mฤori language (often called “greenstone” in New Zealand English), and plays an important role in Mฤori culture. It is considered a taonga, or treasure, and therefore protected under the Treaty of Waitangi, and the exploitation of it is restricted and closely monitored. It is found only in the South Island of New Zealand, known as Te Wai Pounamu in Mฤoriโ”The [land of] Greenstone Water”, or Te Wahi Pounamuโ”The Place of Greenstone”.
Pounamu taonga increase in mana (prestige) as they pass from one generation to another. The most prized taonga are those with known histories going back many generations. These are believed to have their own mana and were often given as gifts to seal important agreements.
Tools, weapons, and ornaments were made of it; in particular adzes, the ‘mere’ (short club), and the hei-tiki (neck pendant). Nephrite jewellery of Maori design is widely popular with locals and tourists, although some of the jade used for these is now imported from British Columbia and elsewhere.
Pounamu taonga include tools such as toki (adzes), whao (chisels), whao whakakลka (gouges), ripi pounamu (knives), scrapers, awls, hammer stones, and drill points. Hunting tools include matau (fishing hooks) and lures, spear points, and kฤkฤ poria (leg rings for fastening captive birds); weapons such as mere (short-handled clubs); and ornaments such as pendants (hei-tiki, hei matau and pekapeka), ear pendants (kuru and kapeu), and cloak pins. Functional pounamu tools were widely worn for both practical and ornamental reasons and continued to be worn as purely ornamental pendants (hei kakรฏ) even after they were no longer used as tools.
Mesoamerica
Jade was a rare and valued material in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. The only source from which the various indigenous cultures, such as the Olmec and Maya, could obtain jade was in the Motagua River valley in Guatemala. Jade was largely an elite good, and was usually carved in various ways, whether serving as a medium upon which hieroglyphs were inscribed or shaped into symbolic figurines. Generally, the material was highly symbolic, and it was often employed in the performance of ideological practices and rituals.
CANADA
Jade was first identified in Canada by Chinese settlers in 1886 in British Columbia At this time jade was considered worthless because they were searching for gold Jade was not commercialized in Canada until the 1970s. The mining business Loex James Ltd., which was started by two Californians, began commercial mining of Canadian jade in 1972
Mining is done from large boulders that contain bountiful deposits of jade. Jade is exposed using diamond-tipped core drills in order to extract samples. This is done to ensure that the jade meets requirements. Hydraulic spreaders are then inserted into cleavage points in the rock so that the jade can be broken away. Once the boulders are removed and the jade is accessible, it is broken down into more manageable 10-tonne pieces using water-cooled diamond saws. The jade is then loaded onto trucks and transported to the proper storage facilities
RUSSIA
Russia imported jade from China for a long time, but in the 1860s its own jade deposits were found in Siberia. Today, the main deposits of jade are in Eastern Siberia, but jade is also extracted in the Polar Urals and in the Krasnoyarsk territory (Kantegirskoye and Kurtushibinskoye deposits). Russian raw jade reserves are estimated at 336 tons. Russian jade culture is closely connected with such jewellery production as Faberge, whose workshops combined the green stone with gold, diamonds, emeralds, and rubies.