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Description
The color of kings was born in vats of rotting sea snails. Tyrian purple was worth more than gold, but the stench of its creation was enough to tear cities apart. In the ancient world, color was not just an aesthetic choice; it was the ultimate indicator of power, wealth, and the right to rule. And no color commanded more authority than Tyrian Purple. A hue so vibrant and enduring that it was strictly reserved for Roman emperors, with a price tag that dwarfed the value of gold.Yet, the origin of this majestic color was violently repulsive. Tyrian Purple was extracted from the rotting glands of the predatory Murex sea snail. It took the horrific slaughter of tens of thousands of these mollusks, left to decay in massive vats under the blazing Mediterranean sun, to produce just a single ounce of dye. The stench of the production facilities was so overpowering that dye-making cities were physically segregated, and ancient laws specifically allowed women to divorce their husbands if they secretly took up the putrid profession of purple dyeing.This book uncovers the grotesque supply chain and the ruthless monopolistic control behind the ancient world's most desired luxury good. It details the chemistry of the extraction and the socioeconomic impact of a color that built empires.Readers will discover the extreme lengths to which humanity has gone for status and understand the hidden, often horrific cost of the luxuries that define our hierarchies.



