It
is well known that silk is discovered in China as one
of the best materials for clothing - it has a look and
feeling of richness that no other materials can match.
However, very few people know when or where or how it
is discovered. Actually, it could date back to the 30th
Century BC when Huang Di (Yellow Emperor) came into
power. There are many legends about the discovery of
silk; some of them are both romantic and mysterious.
Legend
has it that once there lived a father with his daughter,
they had a magic horse, which could not only fly in
the sky but also understand human language. One day,
the father went out on business and did not come back
for quite some time. The daughter made him a promise:
If the horse could find her father, she would marry
him. Finally her father came back with the horse, but
he was shocked at his daughter's promise.
Unwilling
to let his daughter marry a horse, he killed the innocent
horse. And then miracle happened! The horse's skin carried
the girl flying away. They flew and flew, at last, they
stopped on a tree, and the moment the girl touched the
tree, she turned into a silkworm. Everyday, she spit
long and thin silks. The silks just represented her
feeling of missing him.
Another less romantic but more convincing explanation
is that some ancient Chinese women found this wonderful
silk by chance. When they were picking up fruits from
the trees, they found a special kind of fruit, white
but too hard to eat, so they boiled the fruit in hot
water but they still could hardly eat it. At last, they
lost their patience and began to beat them with big
sticks. In this way, silks and silkworms were discovered.
And the white hard fruit is a cocoon!

The
business of raising silkworms and unwinding cocoons
is now known as silk culture or sericulture. It takes
an average of 25-28 days for a silkworm, which is no
bigger than an ant, to grow old enough to spin cocoon.
Then the women farmers will pick them up one by one
to piles of straws, then the silkworm will attach itself
to the straw, with its legs to the outside and begin
to spin.
The
next step is unwinding the cocoons; it is done by reeling
girls. The cocoons are heated to kill the pupae, this
must be done at the right time, otherwise, the pupas
are bound to turn into moths, and moths will make a
hole in the cocoons, which will be useless for reeling.
To unwind the cocoons, first put them in a basin filled
with hot water, find the loose end of the cocoon, and
then twist them, carry then to a small wheel, thus the
cocoons will be unwound. At last, two workers measure
them into a certain length, twist them, they are called
raw silk, then they are dyed and woven into cloth.
An interesting fact is that we can unwind about 1,000
meters long silk from one cocoon, while 111 cocoons
are needed for a man's tie, and 630 cocoons are needed
for a woman's blouse.
Chinese
people developed new way by using silk to make clothes
since the discovery of silk. This kind of clothes became
popular soon. At that time, China's technology was developing
fast. Emperor Wu Di of western Han Dynasty decided to
develop trade with other countries.
To build a road becomes priority to trade silk. For
nearly 60 years of war, the world famous ancient Silk
Road was built up at cost of many losses of life and
treasures. It started from Chang'an (now Xi'an), across
Middle Asia, South Asia and West Asia. Many countries
of Asia and Europe were connected.
From
then on, Chinese silk, along with many other Chinese
inventions, were passed to Europe. Romans, especially
women, were crazy for Chinese silk. Before that, Romans
used to make clothes with linen cloth, animal skin and
wool fabric. Now they all turned to silk. It was a symbol
of wealth and high social status for them to wear silk
clothes. One day, an Indian monk came to visit the Emperor.
This monk had been living in China for several years
and knew the method of raising silkworms. The Emperor
promised a high profit of the monk, the monk hid several
cocoons in his cane and took it to Rome. Then, the technology
of raising silkworms spread out.
Thousands of years have passed since China first discovered
silkworms. Nowadays, silk, in some sense, is still some
kind of luxury. Some countries are trying some new ways
to make silk without silkworms. Hopefully, they can
be successful. But whatever the result, nobody should
forget that silk was, still is, and will always be a
priceless treasure.
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