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SilverAnatolian.com, a one in the world of online Anatolian silver jewelry, is a young team of creative forces united under one roof with one goal: To provide on-line customers with a safe and pleasurable shopping service, while offering a vast range of quality jewelry products at unsurpassable prices.
Our Dream
We established SilverAnatolian.com back in 2007, our prime motivation was to be the best online source of Anatolian silver jewelry, and to offer it at prices most people could buy them.
Your Choice
Working in conjunction with our designers and their teams of skilled craftspeople on a often basis, we are continuously updating our Anatolian silver jewelry every month. We pay special attention to world fashion trends and most importantly our customer’s demands. Our goal is simple: Offer in-trend, high quality, finely finished Anatolian silver jewelry for realistic prices, while maintaining 100% customer satisfaction.
SilverAnatolian.com Community Care
We believe that the key to running a successful on-line business is professional customer care. From the moment you visit SilverAnatolian.com our customer support team dedicates itself to your needs, resting at your entire disposal throughout and beyond the shopping process. We provide you with the securest possible payment methods endorsed by officially recognized companies such as 2Checkout.com and Paypal.com.
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Right up to the last minute, SiverAnatolian.com customers are accompanied by the independent consumer protection of official Internet protocol organizations: The 2Checkout.com organization protects all your credit card information, with Secure Socket Layer (SSL) certification.
30-Day Return Policy
Our products undergo stringent quality control, however some rare instances do occur when a SilverAnatolian.com customer is dissatisfied. In these exceptional cases we allow the customer to return their purchase within a 30-day period of receiving the order so that they can be refunded, exchange or bank and credit the original purchase amount for a later purchase. Without shipping prices.
History of Old World Silver (4000 BC - 1500 AD)
The area of Anatolia (Turkey) is considered the first major source of mined silver, having provided the resource to craftsman throughout Asia Minor. Silver from the Anatolian region largely served as the source of silver for the Western cultures flourishing in the Near East, Crete, and Greece.
Silver craftsmanship was centered largely in Asia Minor and Greek Islands, along with areas of mainland Greece dominated by the Mycenaean culture. Asia Minor provided most of the supply for the flourishing silver market.
A concentrated effort to mine silver began sometime after 3000 B.C. The first sophisticated processing of silver ore was attributed to the Chaldeans in about 2500 B.C., who used a "cupellation" process to extract silver from lead-silver ores. The need for traditional silver (particularly for the flourishing Minoan and later Mycenaean civilizations) resulted in the location and exploitation of silver deposits in what is now Armenia
After the catastrophic destruction of the Minoan (Cretan) civilization in 1600 B.C. and the decline of the Mycenaean culture around 1200 B.C., the focus of silver production changed. The mines of Laurium (near Athens) became the leading production center and provided silver for the burgeoning Greek civilization. Further, the silver trade throughout Asia Minor and North Africa expanded significantly after the 8th century B.C.
The Laurium mines were highly productive; estimates from historical writings and physical evidence from old mine dumps indicate silver production to have been about 1 million troy ounces per year at Laurium during the height if production (600 B.C. to 300 B.C.). In fact, for about 1,000 years ending around the 1st century A.D., the Laurium mines were the largest individual source of world silver production. Outside the Laurium mines, production was concentrated mainly in Asia Minor, Sardinia, other Grecian locations and, to a limited extent, in Asia Minor.
The period following the heyday of Greek mining in Laurium included the Carthaginians exploitation of Spanish silver. After the Punic Wars, the Romans replaced the Carthaginians as the exploiters of Spanish silver and extended their silver mining to other areas of continental Europe.
Spanish mines became a critically important source of silver for nearly 1,000 years, thought their exploitation was halted temporarily by the Moorish conquest of Spain in the 8th century A.D. The Spanish mines not only provided a substantial portion of domestic needs of the Roman Empire until 476 A.D. but also served as a critical source of silver for the Asian spice trade. To meet the burgeoning trading requirements, Greece, Asia Minor, and Italy supplemented the Spanish production.
The Moorish invasion of Spain necessitated that the exploitation of silver move to a broader spectrum of countries, principally in Central Europe. Several major silver mine discoveries occurred between 750 and 1200 A.D., including the classic Schemnitz, Rammelsburg, Goslar, and Saxony regions in Germany. Concurrently, discoveries of silver were made in Austria-Hungary and elsewhere in Eastern Europe.
Based on the analysis of available literature and historical records, the production levels from 300 B.C. to 1000 A.D. are not likely to have risen significantly from the estimated 1.5 million troy ounces per year levels of the Laurium mine era. Although mine production in Spain dominated the first 1,000 years A.D., it was balanced by the decline in production at Laurium and Asia Minor. The real expansion in production occurred in the 500-year period from 1000-1500 A.D., when the number of mining locations and, to a lesser extent, the improvements in mining and processing technology occurred.
Source:
Silver Institute
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