Peridot has always been associated with light. In fact, the
Egyptians called it the “gem of the sun.” Some believed that it protected its
owner from “terrors of the night,” especially when it was set in gold. Others
strung the gems on donkey hair and tied them around their left arms to ward off
evil spirits.
The word peridot comes from the Arabic “faridat,” which
means “gem.” Most peridot formed deep inside the earth and was delivered to the
surface by volcanoes. Some also came to earth in meteorites, but this
extraterrestrial peridot is extremely rare, and not likely to be seen in a
retail jewelry store.
Early records indicate that the ancient Egyptians mined a
beautiful green gem on an island in the Red Sea called Topazios, now known as
St. John’s Island or Zabargad. Legend has it that the island was infested with
snakes, making mining unpleasant until an enterprising pharaoh drove them into
the sea. From the earliest times, people confused this stone—now known to be
peridot—with other gems. It was one of many labeled as “topaz.”
Some historians believe that Cleopatra’s famous emerald
collection might actually have been peridot. People in medieval times continued
to confuse peridot with emerald. For centuries, people believed the fabulous
200-ct. gems adorning the shrine of the Three Holy Kings in Germany’s Cologne
Cathedral were emeralds. They are, in fact, peridots.
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