- History of silk
According to Chinese tradition, the history of silk begins in the 27th century BCE. Its use was confined to China until the
Silk Road opened at some point during the latter half of the first millennium BC. China maintained its virtualmonopoly oversilk for another thousand years. Not confined toclothing , silk was also used for a number of other applications, including writing, and the colour of silk worn was an important indicator ofsocial class during theTang Dynasty .Silk cultivation spread to
Japan in around 300 CE, and by 522 theByzantines managed to obtainsilkworm eggs and were able to begin silkworm cultivation. TheArabs also began to manufacture silk during this same time. As a result of the spread ofsericulture , Chinese silk exports became less important, although they still maintained dominance over theluxury silk market. TheCrusades brought silk production toWestern Europe , in particular to many Italian states, which saw an economic boom exporting silk to the rest of Europe. Changes in manufacturing techniques also began to take place during theMiddle Ages , with devices such as thespinning wheel first appearing. During the 16th centuryFrance joined Italy in developing a successful silk trade, though the efforts of most other nations to develop a silk industry of their own were unsuccessful.The
Industrial Revolution changed much of Europe’s silk industry. Due to innovations in spinningcotton , it became much cheaper to manufacture and therefore caused more expensive silk production to become less mainstream. New weaving technologies, however, increased the efficiency of production. Among these was theJacquard loom , a precursor to moderncomputer s, developed for silk embroidery. Anepidemic of several silkworm diseases caused production to fall, especially in France, where the industry never recovered. In the 20th century Japan and China regained their earlier role in silk production, and China is now once again the world’s largest producer of silk. The rise of new fabrics such asnylon reduced the prevalence of silk throughout the world, and silk is now once again a somewhat rare luxury good, much less important than in its heyday.Early history
The appearance of silk
The earliest evidence of silk was found at the sites of
Yangshao culture inXia County ,Shanxi , where a silk cocoon was found cut in half by a sharp knife, dating back to between 5,000 and 3,000 BCE. The species was identified asbombyx mori , the domesticated silkworm. Fragments of primitive loom can also be seen from the sites ofHemudu culture in Yuyao, Zhejiang, dated to about 4,000 BCE. Scraps of silk were found in aLiangzhu culture site at Qianshanyang in Huzhou, Zhejiang, dating back to 2,700 BCE. [Tang, Chi and Miao, Liangyun, [http://203.72.198.245/web/Content.asp?ID=27524&Query=1 "Zhongguo Sichoushi" ("History of Silks in China")] . "Encyclopedia of China ", 1st ed.] [cite web |url=http://www.asianart.com/textiles/intro.html|title=Textile Exhibition: Introduction|accessdate=2007-08-02 |publisher= Asian art] Other fragments have been recovered from royal tombs in theShang Dynasty (ca. 1600 BCE - ca. 1046 BCE).fr Charles Meyer, "Des mûriers dans le jardin du mandarin", Historia, n°648, December 2000.]During the later epoch, the Chinese lost their secret as the
Koreans , the Japanese, and later theIndia ns succeeded in discovering how to make silk. Allusions to the fabric in theOld Testament show that it was known in western Asia in biblical times.fr "Soie'" (§2. Historique), "Encyclopédie Encarta"] Scholars believe that starting in the 2nd century BC the Chinese established a commercial network aimed at exporting silk to the West. Silk was used, for example, by the Persian court and its king,Darius III , whenAlexander the Great conquered the empire. Even though silk spread rapidly acrossEurasia , with the possible exception of Japan its production remained exclusively Chinese for three millennia.Myths and legends
The writings of
Confucius andChinese tradition recount that in the 27th century BCE a silk worm's cocoon fell into the tea cup of the empressLeizu .cite web |url=http://www.silk.org.uk/history.htm|title= The History of Silk |accessdate=2007-10-23|publisher= The Silk Association of Great Britain ] Wishing to extract it from her drink, the young girl of fourteen began to unroll the thread of the cocoon. She then had the idea to weave it. Having observed the life of the silk worm on the recommendation of her husband, theYellow Emperor , she began to instruct her entourage the art of raising silk worms,sericulture . From this point on, the girl became the goddess of silk inChinese mythology . Silk would eventually leave China in the hair of a princess promised to a prince ofKhotan . This probably occurred in the early 1st century CE. [Hill, John E. 2003. "Annotated Translation of the Chapter on the Western Regions according to the "Hou Hanshu"." 2nd Edition. Appendix A. [http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/hhshu/hou_han_shu.html#a] ] The princess, refusing to go without the fabric she loved, would finally break the imperial ban on silk worm exportation.Though silk was exported to foreign countries in great amounts, sericulture remained a secret that the Chinese guarded carefully. Consequently, other peoples invented wildly varying accounts of the source of the incredible fabric. In
classical antiquity , most Romans, great admirers of the cloth, were convinced that the Chinese took the fabric from tree leaves. [fr cite web | title = Les relations entre le monde romain et la Chine : la tentation du Far East | url = http://www.clio.fr/BIBLIOTHEQUE/les_relations_entre_le_monde_romain_et_la_chine__la_tentation_du_far_east.asp | author = Jean-Noël Robert | publisher = clio.fr | accessdate = May 6 | accessyear = 2007] This belief was affirmed bySeneca the Younger in his Phaedra and byVirgil in hisGeorgics . Notably,Pliny the Elder knew better. Speaking of the "bombyx" or silk moth, he wrote in hisNatural Histories "They weave webs, like spiders, that become a luxurious clothing material for women, called silk." [Pliny the Elder , "Natural Histories " 11.xxvi.76]ilk usage in Ancient and Medieval China
In China, silk worm farming was originally restricted to women, and many women were employed in the silk-making industry. Even though some saw the development of a luxury product as useless, silk provoked such a craze among high society that the rules in the "
Li Ji " were used to regulate and limit its use to the members of the imperial family. For approximately a millennium, the right to wear silk was reserved for the emperor and the highest dignitaries. Later, it gradually extended to other classes of Chinese society. Silk began to be used for decorative means and also in less luxurious ways: musical instruments, fishing, and bow-making. Peasants did not have the right to wear silk until the Qing dynasty (1644-1911).Paper was one of the greatest discoveries of ancient China. Beginning in the 3rd century BCE paper was made in all sizes with various materials. [fr "Histoire des techniques" p.455] Silk was no exception, and silk workers had been making paper since the 2nd century BCE. Silk,bamboo ,linen ,wheat andrice straw were all used differently, and paper made with silk became the first type of luxury paper. Researchers have found an early example of writing done on silk paper in the tomb of a Marchioness who died around 168, inMawangdui ,Hunan . The material was certainly more expensive, but also more practical than bamboo. Treatises on many subjects, includingmeteorology ,medicine ,astrology ,divinity , and even maps written on silk [cite web |url=http://www.travellady.com/Issues/December03/AHistoryofSilkMaps.htm |last =Plous | first = Estelle |title= A History of Silk Maps |accessdate=2007-05-20 |publisher= TravelLady Magazine] have been discovered.During the
Han Dynasty , silk became progressively more valuable in its own right, and became more than simply a material. It was used to pay government officials and compensate citizens who were particularly worthy. By the same token that one would sometimes estimate the price of products according to a certain weight ofgold , the length of the silk cloth became a monetary standard in China. The wealth that silk brought to China stirred up envy in neighbouring peoples. Beginning in the 2nd century BC theXiongnu , regularly pillaged the provinces of the Han Chinese for around 250 years. Silk was a common offering by the emperor to these tribes in exchange for peace. For more than a millennium, silk remained the principal diplomatic gift of the emperor of China to his neighbours or to his vassals. The use of silk became so important that "silk" (纟) soon constituted one of the principal radicals of the Chinese alphabet.Broadly speaking, the use of silk was regulated by a very precise code in China. For example, the
Tang Dynasty andSong Dynasty imposed upon bureaucrats the use of a particular colour according to their different functions in society. Under the Ming, silk began to be used in a series of accessories:handkerchief s, wallets, belts, or even an embroidered piece of fabric displaying dozens of animals, real or mythical. These fashion accessories remained associated with a particular position: there was a specific bonnet forwarriors , forjudge s, fornobles , and others for religious use. The women of high Chinese society heeded codified practices and used silk in their garments to which they added countless motifs. A13th century work, the "Jinpingmei", gives a description of one such motif:Chinese silk and its commerce
A number of archaeological discoveries showed that silk had become a luxury material appreciated in foreign countries well before the opening of the Silk Road by the Chinese. For example, silk has been found in the
Valley of Kings in a tomb of amummy dating from 1070 BC.cite web |url=http://www.silkroadfoundation.org/artl/silkhistory.shtml|title= History of Silk |accessdate=2007-03-08 |publisher= Silk road Foundation] First the Greeks, then the Romans began to speak of theSeres (people of silk), a term to designate the inhabitants of the far-off kingdom, China. According to certain historians, the first Roman contact with silk was that of the legions of the governor ofSyria ,Crassus . At theBattle of Carrhae , near to theEuphrates , the legions were said to be so surprised by the brilliance of the banners ofParthia that they fled.The silk road toward the west was opened by the Chinese in the 2nd century AD. The main road left from
Beijing , going either to the north or south of theTaklamakan desert, one of the most arid in the world, before crossing thePamir Mountains . The caravans that employed this method to exchange silk with other merchants were generally quite large, including from 100 to 500 people as well ascamel s andyak s carrying around 140 kg (300 lb) of merchandise. They linked toAntioch and the coasts of theMediterranean , about one year's travel from Beijing. In the South, a second route went byYemen ,Burma , andIndia before rejoining the northern route. [fr "Histoire de la Route de la soie", "Encyclopaedia Universalis"] [fr Charles Meyer, "Les routes de la soie : 22 siècles d'aventure", "Historia", n°648 December 2000.]Not long after the conquest of
Egypt in 30 BCE regular commerce began between the Romans and Asia, marked by the Roman appetite for silk cloth coming from theFar East , which was then resold to the Romans by theParthians . TheRoman Senate tried in vain to prohibit the wearing of silk, for economic reasons as well as moral ones. The import of Chinese silk resulted in vast amounts of gold leaving Rome, to such an extent that silk clothing was perceived as a sign ofdecadence andimmorality .pread of production
Although silk was well known in
Europe and most ofAsia , China was able to keep a nearmonopoly on silk production. The monopoly was defended by an imperial decree, condemning to death anyone attempting to export silkworms or their eggs. Only around the year 300 CE did aJapan ese expedition succeed in taking some silkworm eggs and four young Chinese girls, who were forced to teach their captors the art ofsericulture . [Cook, (1999), 144.] Techniques of sericulture were subsequently introduced to Japan on a larger scale by frequent diplomatic exchanges between the 8th century and 9th centuries.Starting in the 4th century BC silk began to reach the West by
merchants who would exchange it forgold ,ivory ,horse s or precious stones. Up to the frontiers of theRoman Empire , silk became a monetary standard for estimating the value of different products.Hellenistic Greece appreciated the high quality of the Chinese goods and made efforts to plantmulberry trees and breed silkworms in theMediterranean basin .Sassanid Persia controlled the trade of silk destined for Europe andByzantium .It was not until 552 CE that the
Byzantine emperorJustinian obtained the first silkworm eggs. He had sent twoNestorian monk s toCentral Asia , and they were able to smuggle silkworm eggs to him hidden in rods ofbamboo . While under the monks' care, the eggs hatched, though they did not cocoon before arrival. TheByzantine church was thus able to make fabrics for the emperor, with the intention of developing a large silk industry in theEastern Roman Empire , using techniques learned from theSassanid s. These gynecia had a legal monopoly on the fabric, but the empire continued to import silk from other major urban centres on theMediterranean .. [fr Catherine Jolivet-Lévy and Jean-Pierre Sodini (2006), "Byzance", inEncyclopaedia Universalis "] The magnificence of the Byzantine techniques was not a result of the manufacturing process, but instead of the meticulous attention paid to the execution and decorations. The weaving techniques they used were taken fromEgypt . The first diagrams of sempleloom s appeared in the 5th century. [fr "Histoire des Techniques" p.435 ]The Arabs, with their widening conquests, spread sericulture across the shores of the Mediterranean. Included in these were
Africa ,Spain andSicily , all of which developed an important silk industry. fr Anne Kraatz, Marie Risselin-Steenebrugen, Michèle Pirazzoli-t’Serstevens and Madeleine Paul-David (2006), "Tissus d'art", in "Encyclopaedia Universalis"]Since the Chinese lost their monopoly on silk production, there was no longer a market for the most basic of their silk products. They did, however, maintain dominance in the luxury silk item market, and China continued to export high-quality fabric to Europe and the
Near East along the silk road.Much later, following the
Crusades , techniques of silk production began to spread across Western Europe. In 1147 while Byzantine emperorManuel I Komnenos was focusing all his efforts on theSecond Crusade , the Norman kingRoger II of Sicily attackedCorinth and Thebes, two important centres of Byzantine silk production. They took the crops and silk production infrastructure, and deported all the workers toPalermo , thereby causing the Norman silk industry to flourish. [fr Georges Ostrogorsky, "Histoire de l’état byzantin", Payot, 1956, reedited in 1977, ISBN 2-228-07061-0] The sack ofConstantinople by theFourth Crusade in 1204 brought decline to the city and its silk industry, and many artisans left the city in the early thirteenth century.Italy developed a large domestic silk industry after 2000 skilled weavers came fromConstantinople . Many also chose to settle inAvignon to furnish the popes of Avignon.The sudden boom of the silk industry in the Italian state of
Lucca , starting in the 11th and 12th centuries was due to much Sicilian, Jewish, and Greek settlement, alongside many other immigrants from neighbouring cities in southern Italy. [fr "Histoire des techniques" p.551] With the loss of many Italian trading posts in theOrient , the import of Chinese styles drastically declined. Gaining momentum, in order to satisfy the rich and powerfulbourgeoisie 's demands for luxury fabrics, the cities ofLucca ,Genoa ,Venice andFlorence were soon exporting silk to all of Europe. In 1472 there were 84 workshops and at least 7000 craftsmen in Florence alone.Reciprocal influences
Silk, which had a reputation of being a Chinese textile, was in fact made throughout the region of
Eurasia Fact|date=April 2008, using various breeds oflepidoptera ns, both wild and domestic. There is no doubt that the Chinese were the first to begin production on such a large scale, having the most effective breed for silk production, thebombyx mori . Chinese sources claim the existence of a machine to unwind silkworm cocoons in 1090. The cocoons were placed in a large basin of hot water, the silk would leave the cauldron by tiny guiding rings, and would be wound onto a largespool , thanks to a backwards and forward motion. [fr "Histoire des techniques" p.455] Little information exists about spinning techniques in use in China. Thespinning wheel , in all likelihood moved by hand, was known by the beginning of the Christian era. The first accepted image of a spinning wheel appears in 1210. There is an image of a silk spinning machine powered by awater wheel that dates to 1313.More information is known about the looms used. The "Nung Sang Chi Yao", or "Fundamentals of Agriculture and Sericulture", compiled around 1210, is rich with pictures and descriptions, many pertaining to silk. [Joseph Needham, Francesca Bray, Hsing-Tsung Huang, Christian Daniels, Nicholas K. Menzies, "Science and Civilisation in China", Cambridge University Press, 1984 p. 72 ISBN 0521250765 ] It repeatedly claims the Chinese looms to be far superior to all others. It speaks of two types of loom that leave the worker's arms free: the draw loom, which could have either a Chinese or European origin, and the pedal loom which is attributed to the Chinese. The many diagrams originate in the 12th and 13th centuries. When examined closely, many similarities with European machines of that epoch can be seen. Since the
Jin dynasty, the existence of silkdamask s has been well recorded, and since the 2nd century BCE, four-shafted looms and other innovations allowed the creation of silkbrocade s.ilk in the medieval world
A more abundant luxury
The high
Middle Ages saw continued use of established techniques for silk manufacture without any changes to speak of, neither in materials nor in tools used. Between the 10th and 12th centuries, small changes began to appear, though the changes of the thirteenth century were much larger and more radical. In a short time, new fabrics began to appear;hemp andcotton each also had their own particular techniques of manufacture. Known since Roman times, silk remained a rare and expensive material. Byzantinemagnaneries inGreece andSyria (6th to 8th century), and those of theArabs inSicily andSpain (8th to 10th century) were able to supply the luxury material in a much greater abundance.Xinru Liu, "Silk and Religion: An Exploration of Material Life and the Thought of People AD 600 - 1200", Oxford University Press US, 1998.]Improved technology
The 13th century saw an already changing technology undergo many dramatic changes. It is possible that, as with in
England at the end of the 18th century, advances in the textile industry were a driving force behind advances in technology as a whole. Silk indeed occupies a privileged place in history on account of this. [fr "Histoire des Techniques" p.553]At the start of the thirteenth century, a primitive form of milling the silk threads was already in use. In 1221
Jean de Garlande 's dictionary, and in 1226,Étienne Boileau 's "Livre des métiers" ("Tradesman's Handbook") enumerated many types of devices which can only have been doubling machines. The instruments used were further perfected inBologna between 1270 and 1280. From the start of the fourteenth century, many documents allude to the use of devices that were quite complex. [fr "Histoire des Techniques" p.557]The
reel , originally developed for the silk industry, now has multiple uses. The earliest surviving depiction of aspinning wheel is a panel ofstained glass in theCathedral of Chartres . [Ronan (1994), 68,]Bobbin s and warping machines appear together in the stained glass at Chartres and in afresco in theCologne Kunkelhaus (ca 1300). It is possible that the toothed warping machine was created by the silk industry; it allowed the warp to be more uniform and allowed the warp to be of a longer length. [fr "Histoire des Techniques" p.557]Starting at the end of the 14th century, no doubt on account of the devastation caused mid-century by the
Black Death , there was a general shift towards less expensive techniques. Many things which would have earlier been completely forbidden by theguild s were now commonplace (using low quality wool,carding , etc.). In the silk industry, the use of water-powered mills grew, and by the 15th century, the loom designed by Jean le Calabrais saw nearly universal use. [fr "Histoire des Techniques" p.639]The silk industry in France
Italian silk cloth was very expensive, as much a result of the cost of the raw material as of the production costs. The craftsmen in Italy proved unable to keep up with the exigencies of French fashion, which continuously demanded lighter and less expensive materials. [fr Autour du Fil, l'encyclopédie des arts textiles] These materials were used for clothing, and garment production began to be done locally. Nevertheless, Italian silk long remained among the most prized, mostly for furnishings and the brilliant colours of the dyes.
Following the example of the wealthy Italian city-states of the era (
Venice ,Florence ,Lucca , etc.), which had become the centre of the luxury textile industry,Lyon obtained a similar function in the French market. In 1466 KingLouis XI decided to develop a national silk industry in Lyon. In the face of protests by the Lyonnais, he conceded and moved the silk fabrication toTours , but the industry in Tours stayed relatively marginal. His main objective was to reduce France'strade deficit with Italy, which caused France to lose 400,000 to 500,000 goldenécu s a year. [fr Georges Duby (ed), "Histoire de la France : Dynasties et révolutions, de 1348 à 1852" (vol. 2),Larousse , 1999 p. 53 ISBN 2035050472 ] It was under Francis I in around 1535 that a royal charter was granted to two merchants, Étienne Turquet and Barthélemy Naris, to develop a silk trade in Lyon. In 1540 the king granted amonopoly on silk production to the city of Lyon. Starting in the 16th century Lyon became the capital of the European silk trade, notably producing many reputable fashions.fr Gérard Chauvy, "La dure condition des forçats du luxe", "Historia", n°648, December 2000] Gaining confidence, the silks produced in the city little by little began to abandon the original oriental styles and moved towards their own distinctive style, with an emphasis on landscapes. Thousand of workers, thecanut s, devoted themselves to the flourishing industry. In the middle of the 17th century over 14,000 looms were in use in Lyon, and the silk industry fed a third of the city's population.In the 18th and 19th centuries
Provence experienced a boom in sericulture that would last until theFirst World War , with much of the silk produced being shipped north to Lyon.Viens andLa Bastide-des-Jourdans are two of the "communes" ofLuberon that profited the most frommulberry plantations that have since disappeared. [fr Guide Gallimard - Parc naturel LUBERON] Working at home under thedomestic system , silk spinning and silk treatment employed many people and increased the income of the working class.pread to other countries
England under Henry IV was also looking to develop a silk industry, but no opportunity arose until the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in the 1680s when hundreds of thousands of FrenchHuguenots , many of which were skilled weavers and experts in sericulture, began immigrating to England to escape religious persecution. Some areas, includingSpitalfields saw many high-quality silk workshops spring up, their products distinct from continental silk largely by the colours used. [Thirsk (1997), 120.] Nonetheless, the British climate prevented England's domestic silk trade from becoming globally dominant.Many envisioned starting a silk industry in the British colonies in America starting in 1619 under the reign of King
James I of England . The silk industry in the Colonies never became very large. Likewise, silk was introduced to numerous other countries, includingMexico , where it was brought by Cortez in 1522. Only rarely did these new silk industries grow to any significant size. [Peter N. Stearns, William Leonard Langer "The Encyclopedia of World History", Houghton Mifflin Books, 2001 p. 403 ISBN 0395652375 ]ilk since the Industrial Revolution
The start of the Industrial Revolution
The start of the
Industrial Revolution was marked by a massive boom in the textile industry, with remarkable technological innovations made, led by thecotton industry ofGreat Britain . In its early years, there were often disparities in technological innovation between different stages of fabric manufacture, which encouraged complimentary innovations. For example, spinning progressed much more rapidly than weaving.The silk industry, however, did not gain any benefit from innovations in spinning, as silk is naturally already a thread. Making silk, silver, and gold
brocade s is a very delicate and precise process, with each colour needing its own dedicated shuttle. In the 17th century and 18th centuries progress began to be made in the simplification and standardization of silk manufacture, with many advances following one after another. Bouchon and Falcon'spunchcard loom appeared in 1775, later improved on byJacques de Vaucanson . Later,Joseph-Marie Jacquard improved on the designs of Falcon and Vaucanson, introducing the revolutionaryJacquard loom , which allowed a string of punchcards to be processed mechanically in the correct sequence. [fr "Histoire des techniques" p.718 ] The punchcards of the Jacquard loom were a direct precursor to the moderncomputer , in that they gave a (limited) form of programmability. Punchcards themselves were carried over to computers, and were ubiquitous until their obsolescence in the1970s . From 1801 embroidery became highly mechanized due to the effectiveness of the Jacquard loom. The mechanism behind the Jacquard loom even allowed complex designs to be mass produced.The Jacquard loom was immediately denounced by workers, who accused it of causing
unemployment , but soon it had become vital to the industry. The loom was declared public property in 1806, and Jacquard was rewarded with apension and a royalty on each machine. In 1834 there were a total of 2885 Jacquard looms in Lyon alone. TheCanut revolt in 1831 foreshadowed many of the larger worker uprisings of the Industrial Revolution. The canuts occupied the city of Lyon, and would not relinquish it until a bloody repression by the army, led by Marshal Soult. A second revolt, similar to the first, took place in 1834.Decline in the European silk industry
The first silkworm diseases began to appear in 1845, creating an epidemic. Among them are
pébrine , caused by themicrosporidia "Nosema bombycis", grasserie, caused by avirus ,flacherie , caused by eating infected mulberry leaves orwhite muscardine disease , caused by thefungus "beauveria bassiana ". The epidemic grew to a massive scale, and after having attacked the silkworms, other viruses began to infect the mulberry trees. The chemistJean-Baptiste Dumas , French minister of agriculture, was charged with stopping the epidemic. In face of sericulturers' call for help, he askedLouis Pasteur to study the disease, starting in 1865. ["Louis Pasteur," Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2007http://encarta.msn.com ©1997-2007 Microsoft Corporation.] For many years, Pasteur thought that pébrine was not a contagious disease. In 1870 he changed his view, and measures were enacted that caused the disease to decline.Nevertheless, the increase in the price of silkworm cocoons and the reduction in importance of silk in the garments of the
bourgeoisie in the 19th century caused the decline of the silk industry in Europe. The opening of theSuez Canal in 1869 and the silk shortage in France reduced the price of importing Asian silk, particularly from China and Japan. [A. J. H. Latham and Heita Kawakatsu, "Japanese Industrialization and the Asian Economy" p. 199]Starting from the
Long Depression (1873 – 1896), Lyonnais silk production had become totally industrialized, and hand looms were rapidly disappearing. The 19th century saw the textile industry's progress caused by advances in chemistry. Thesynthesis ofaniline was used to makemauveine (aniline purple)dye and the synthesis ofquinine was used to makeindigo dye. In 1884 Count Hilaire de Chardonnet invented artificial silk and in 1891 opened a factory dedicated to the production of artificial silk (viscose ), which cost much less and in part replaced natural silk.ilk in modern times
Following the crisis in Europe, the modernization of sericulture in Japan made it the world's foremost silk producer. Italy managed to rebound from the crisis, but France was never able to. Urbanization in Europe saw many French and Italian agricultural workers leave silk growing for more lucrative factory work. Raw silk was imported from Japan to fill the void. Asian countries, formerly exporters of
raw material s (cocoons and raw silk), progressively began to export more and more finished garments.During the
Second World War , silk supplies from Japan were cut off, so western countries were forced to find substitutes. Synthetic fibres such asnylon were used in products such as parachutes and stockings, replacing silk. Even after the war, silk was not able to regain many of the markets lost, though it remained an expensive luxury product. Postwar Japan, through improvements in technology and a protectionist market policy, became the world's foremost exporter of raw silk, a position it held until the 1970s. The continued rise in importance of synthetic fibres and loosening of the protectionist economy contributed to the decline of Japan's silk industry, and by 1975 it was no longer a net exporter of silk. [cite web | title = The Cocoon Strikes Back: Innovative Products Could Revive a Dying Industry | url = http://web-japan.org/trends00/honbun/tj001117.html | publisher = Japan Information Network | date = 2000 | accessdate = October 23 | accessyear = 2007]With its recent economic reforms, the
People's Republic of China has become the world's largest silk producer. In 1996 it produced 58,000tonnes out of a world production of 81,000, followed byIndia at 13,000 tonnes. Japanese production is now marginal, at only 2500 tonnes. Between 1995 and 1997 Chinese silk production went down 40% in an effort to raise prices, reminiscent of earlier shortages. [Anthony H. Gaddum, "Silk", "Business and Industry Review", (2006). "In Encyclopædia Britannica"] World demand for silk in the 1990s stayed fairly low with the exception of a few markets, including India and theUnited Kingdom . Silk's image suffered on account of distribution of low quality fabric, though it has improved recently. Today the silk trade is largely dependent on a few consuming countries, including India and Japan.Notes
References
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