From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Revision as of 13:26, 10 June 2020 by imported>Lady Kyashira
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The Laurion Silver Mines
- Narrator: Silver mines were extremely rare in Ancient Greece, which only increased their importance. Athens started exploiting the Laurion silver mines at the end of the 6th century BCE, and used its metal to produce its currency.
Production at the mines exploded around 485 BCE, when an especially rich vein was discovered. The mines' abundant silver made Athens one of the weathliest cities in Greece. They also provided the resources necessary to build a fleet large enough to defeat the Persians at the Battle of Salamis.
In short, the Laurion mines played an integral part in the emergence of Athens as a Greek superpower.
Learn more:
Athens's coinage dates back to around 530 BCE. The abundant resources from the Laurion mines allowed the city to mint a prolific coinage renowned for the quality of its silver.
Like modern currency, Athens's coins had different values and weighs. The most-struck denomination was the tetradrachm, which weighed 17.20m grams. The coin, as its
name implies, was worth four (tetras) drachmae.
The smallest coins - and the ones most commonly used in the agora - were the triobol (2.15g), the obol (0.72g), and hemiobol (0.369).
- Narrator: Exploiting the mines' resources required a lot of labor. To meet this requirement and save on cost, Athens leased out mining concessions to its citizens, who had their slaves to do most of the work, alongside poor day-laborers.
In the 5th century BCE alone, there were anywhere from 10,000 to 30,000 people toiling in the mines of Laurion. Together, the workers managed to produce an estimated twenty tons of silver per year.
Learn more:
Ancient Greeks extracted a number of different metals like gold, silver, copper, tin, lead, iron, and mercury.
The most precious metals, silver and gold, were appreciated for their quality and rarity. They were used to produce coins, but also jewelry, other luxury objects, and even statues like the gold and ivory statue of Athena Parthenos.
Most metals were traded in the form of ingots.
- Narrator: Mine workers used washeries to help clean rock from the ore. The washing process required a large supply of warer, but Laurion was an infamously dry region. To compensate, cisterns were built in the mining area to collect and conserve seasonal rainwater.
Once enough water had accumulated, workers poured it into wooden troughs containing rock and ore. The water's flow seperated the lighter grains of rock from the heavier ore, which was caught in depressions at the bottom of the trough. The newly cleaned ore was collected for refinement, and the water was redirected back into a tank to be reused later.
Learn more
The concept of using water to seperate ore from rock is still applied today by modern gold miners.
- Narrator: Once the ore was clean and dry, it was ready for smelting. It's purpose was to isolate the silver in the ore. To do this, the ore was placed in a conical furnance filled with combustible charcoal. Bellows pumped air into the furnance to control the temperature.
Inside, the ore burned, emitting a toxic smoke that was evacuated through a chimney. Eventually, the silver alloy was seperated from the slag and collected for the last step in the refinement process: cupellation.
Cupellation removed any leftover lead from the silver. The smelted alloy was placed in a cupel, an absorbent bowl made of bone ashes. It was then put in a furnance, where it absorbed the lead and left only silver behind.
Learn more
The furnances used for smelting and cupellation required an enormous amount of fuel. Based on evidence from South American silver mines exploited under similar conditions, it's estimated that Ancient Greek mines required 10,000 tons of charcoal to produce one ton of silver.
- Narrator: While the mines of Laurion belonged to Athens, the city frequently leased them to private citizens who exploited the site from anywhere from three to ten years. These citizens enlisted slaves and poor day-laborers to carry out most of the work.
The workers had a very low life expectancy — about three to five years — due to the hazardous working conditions. The dangers they faced included toxic lead vapor in the air and lung-choking dust in the galleries.
However, they were fed well enough to keep up their work, and their combined labor managed to produce an estimated twenty tons of silver a year.
Learn more:
The Athenian politician Nikias once bought a Thracian slave named Sosias for one talent — the equivalent of 6,000 drachmae, and 30-40 times more than the normal price of a slave.
The reason for Sosias' high price was that he was an expert in searching for and finding silver tunnels. Because of this, Nikias installed Sosias as the administrator of the 1,000 slaves he already had working at the Laurion silver mines.
Nikias' purchase paid off, and according to Lysias, the politician eventually accumulated a fortune of one hundred talents from his mining business.