aboutbeyondlogin

exploring and collecting history online — science, technology, and industry

advanced

Sixty Centuries of Copper

Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 11/08/2007 - 20:21.
  • Ancient (BCE-40 CE)
  • Contemporary (Post-WWII)
  • Early Modern (15th-18th Century)
  • Industrial/Military Technology
  • Middle Ages (5th-15th Century)
  • Modern (18th-20th Century)
  • Professional Association
  • Secondary Source
URL: 

http://64.90.169.191/education/60centuries/homepage/homepage.html

Author: 
B Webster Smith
Excerpt: 

Copper was the first metal used by man in any quantity. The earliest workers in copper soon found that it could be easily hammered into sheets and the sheets in turn worked into shapes which became more complex as their skill increased. After the introduction of bronze, a wide range of castings also became possible. Many of the illustrations on this site serve to show man's progress as a metal-worker, culminating in the priceless inheritance of the Renaissance craftsmen. But copper and its principal alloys, bronze and brass, have always been more than a means of decorative embellishment. Although iron became the basic metal of every Western civilization from Rome onwards it was the copper metals which were used when a combination of strength and durability was required. The ability to resist corrosion ensured that copper, bronze and brass remained as functional as well as decorative materials during the Middle Ages and the successive centuries through the Industrial Revolution and on to the present day.

Echo is a project of the Center for History and New Media, George Mason University
© Copyright 2008 Center for History and New Media