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The
internet is a very impersonal medium for doing business and we prefer
to interact personally our clients. If our silk appeals to you then
we wish to interact with you personally.
We
are a team of motivated individuals who have lived and worked in
Cambodia and Asia over the last 14 years . We have experiences in
local crafts, fashion, marketing & telecommunications.
We work alongside the local craftsmen & women to advise and
teach skills such as design, production and quality control.
S4silk
is a wholesale outlet for hand made silks from Cambodia. At present
we are only showcasing raw silk from 3 provinces in Cambodia. Our
netx trip to the land of silk, will be in August 2003. From mid
September 2003 we will also be able to bring you organza and a wide
range of supreme silks.
Launched
in June 2003, S4silk welcomes any comments that would make the site
easier for our clients to use. Please feel free to send comments
to info@s4silk.com
History of silk
Discovery of Silk
A conflicting legend attributes the discovery of Silk to HsiLing
Shih , the consort of Emperor Huang Ti , China first imperial ruler
( 2640 B.C. ). The story goes that as Hsi Ling Shih sat languidly
sipping her tea beneath the mulberry trees in the Imperial Gardens,
a creamy colored cocoon landed in her cup. To her astonishment,
it unraveled to form a long a delicate tread. Delighted with its
beauty, she gathered thread from thousands of other cocoons and
wove them into a ceremonial robe for the Emperor.
Evidence indicates that sericulture and silk weaving techniques
originated in China four to five thousands years ago. In Shangtung
province, the Imperial Court established factories to weave silk
fabric both for ceremonial use and as gifts for foreign powers.
Chinese emperors profited handsomely taxes levied on silk and the
fabric became so treasured that it was used as measure of currency
and reward.
The art spread
For hundreds of years, the Chinese jealously guarded the secret
art of sericulture. As a result, sericulture spread slowly. It reached
Khotan on the Afghanistan border around 140 BC, when an Imperial
princess married a prince of Khotan and smuggled out silkworm eggs
by hiding them in her headdress. According to legend, the art spread
east to Japan around AD 195, but under less romantic conditions.
Two Chinese concubines were kidnapped and coerced into revealing
the secret, which was then exchanged for a large reward. Western
legend claims that in AD 550, the Roman Emperor Justinian persuaded
two monks to journey to China to search for the secret. Two years
later they returned; one monk carried white mulberry seeds in a
pouch, and the other concealed the silkworm eggs in his bamboo cane.
The Greeks began producing silk after Alexander the Great (356-323
BC) conquered Persia and in 330B.C. China was referred to as the
"Land of Silk" by the Egyptians.
Nevertheless silk was held to be a sacred commodity in the West
until the Han Dynasty (205 BC to AD 220), when the perilous Silk
Road came into existence. It began in Xi'an in Shaanxi Province
and ran across the central Asian continent, through Persia to the
Mediterranean Sea. From there, the silk reached the other destinations
by ship. Few completed the whole journey caravan loads were passed
from trader to trader and often exchanged for commodities such as
gold, jade, wool, horses and glass.
Around 1275, the Venetian explorer Marco Polo returned to Italy
after years of adventure in China and Asia, bringing with him glorious
silks and sericulture knowledge. From the 14th century, silk production
thrived in Europe, and both Italy and France became important silk
centers. By the 17th century, sericulture reached the American Colonies
with the early settlers and thereby had encircled the globe.
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