The Stones In Your Pink Sapphire And Topaz Bracelet Have Great Significance

By Ryan Myers


Some people who love jewelry just like the way it looks and makes them feel. Others, who are lucky enough to own fine pieces, are often interested in the history behind their bracelets, necklaces, and earrings. They may consider them artifacts and artwork more than just decorative adornments. If you have purchased a pink sapphire and topaz bracelet, you might be interested in knowing the history and lore behind the gems and the significance of combining them into one piece.

Before you consider the significance of the gems in your piece of jewelry, it might be interesting to learn more about when people came to wear jewelry around their wrists at all. The earliest known use of bracelets was about seven thousand years ago. Explorers and archaeologists have discovered their use among the Egyptians, Chinese, and Mesopotamians. Many were constructed of grasses. It was not until after the Bronze Age that craftsmen began to use gold and silver to make their pieces.

Sapphires have traditionally represented faithfulness, truth, and nobility. Brilliant blue is the color most commonly associated with them. Many recall that Prince William gave Kate his mother's blue sapphire engagement ring. Prince Charles may have originally chosen it in part because the stone represents romance and royalty. In the Middle Ages, blue sapphires were worn by religious orders to symbolize heaven.

Rubies and sapphires are corundums, which means they made of extremely dense aluminum oxide. Rubies are red. A corundum stone of any other color is a sapphire. A gem can be any number of red variations and still be a sapphire though. Sapphires come in a wide variety of pink shades including an orange pink gem which is called padparadscha. These gems come from the Asian country of Sri Lanka. Padparadscha translates into English as lotus flower.

The birthstone of November is the topaz. In Sanskrit the name means fire. If you are celebrating your twenty-third or fourth wedding anniversary, topaz jewelry would make a great, and appropriate, gift. These gems are not rare, but they are very popular. Blue is the most common color you see, but the pinkish orange and yellow gold gems are the most desirable. When jewelers assess these stones they value them in part on how deep the color is.

For the populations that lived during the Middle Ages, topaz had the power to heal and even cheat death. Strength and invisibility were the powers the ancient Greeks believed the stone possessed. They were worn as amulets by the Egyptians to make them immune to injury.

There is a significance to combining these two gems into one piece of jewelry. Both are considered precious metals which increases value. The gems throughout the years have been prized by royalty and considered symbols of healing and romance. Wearing jewelry containing both stones is believed to give those you encounter a good impression of you.

Owning and wearing interesting jewelry can be a good conversation starter. When people see what you have chosen and question you about its significance, it is fun to give them some historical facts, superstitions, and ancient beliefs. Your friends will be impressed with your knowledge.




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