17586
Accession Number
16514
Author
Zacharias, Sandra K.
Title Of Article Chaper
Brass making in medieval western Europe
Title Of Journal Book
Canadian mining and metallurgical bulletin
Volume
77
Issue
863
Pages
110-114
Reference Bibliography
Includes bibliog. refs.
Language Of Text
English
Literature Type
Serial
Literature Level
Analytic
Abstract
Brass, a deliberate alloy of copper and zinc, has been known since before Roman times. There are two main methods of making brass: (1) Cementation or calamine process - crushed zinc ore (calamine, ZnCO<sub>3</sub>, or calcined calamine ZnO), is mixed with charcoal and small pieces of metallic copper and heated to about 900°C in a closed crucible. (2) Alloying - metallic copper and zinc melted together in a reverberatory furnace. According to most modern authorities (e.g. Smith and Forbes, 1955), the calamine process was the only one used in Western Europe prior to the 18th Century. At that time, the alloying technique began to take over, because metallic zinc was successfully produced on a large scale for the first time. Previously, this had been a problem because zinc vapourizes at 906°C or about the same temperature at which it can be reduced for its ore. Thus, some means had to be devised to collect and condense the zinc vapour (Tylecote 1976). Metallic zinc was known, however, earlier than the 18th Century A.D. Several early finds have been made, including a rolled sheet of metallic zinc found in excavations at the Athens Agora dating to the 3rd to 2nd Century B.C. (Farnsworth et al. 1949). The Chinese were producing zinc by at least the 10th Century A.D. and, by the 17th Century, Chinese zinc ingots were being imported into Europe by the Dutch East India Company (Needham 1974). Metallic zinc is also mentioned in several documentary sources from the 16th Century (e.g. Paracelsus, Agricola). This study traces the changes in Western brass making methods from Classical to Renaissance times by examining documentary and archaeological evidence.
pub_id
17586