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The Pigments That Built Empires: What Ancient Dyes Reveal About Power, Scarcity, and Human Nature

The Pigments That Built Empires: What Ancient Dyes Reveal About Power, Scarcity, and Human Nature

Season 4 Episode 31 Published 10 months, 1 week ago
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What's fascinating isn't just the scarcity but how swiftly that scarcity was weaponized as a tool of social control.

In Rome, the wearing of purple evolved from a status symbol into a legally enforced class marker. Julius Caesar began wearing the all-purple toga praetexta as a show of power. By the 5th century CE, purple had become a complete state monopoly. Only the emperor or those specifically granted permission could legally wear or even purchase purple silk garments, the kekalumina. Foreigners were banned from trading them.

This transformation—from luxury good to legally restricted symbol of power—follows a pattern we still see today. The moment something acquires value through scarcity, systems of exclusion inevitably emerge around it. ... continue reading the article

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