Tuesday, June 9, 2009

A Look at Silk's History

By Neta E. Talmor

Silk became a part of human history in 27 BCE, and until the opening of the Silk Road around 1 BCE, its use was largely restricted to China. China continued to use silk extensively for the next thousand years and it could be found in clothing, paper and many other forms. It was an extremely expensive fabric and wearing fine silk was a sign of wealth and prestige, especially during the days of the Tang Dynasty.

It wasn't until 300 AD that silk production spread to Japan, and by 522, the Byzantines had obtained the technique. Around about this time period, the Arabs began manufacturing silk as well, and because sericulture was becoming more well known, silk imports from China became less important. Western countries like Italy began to export their own silk and the Renaissance saw a change in the method of production. France also started to trade silk with Italy, and they remained the two leaders when it came to silk in the European world that did not come from China.

During the Industrial Revolution in Europe, the spinning wheel came to into wide usage, which ended up resulting cheaper manufacturing across the board for cotton, though silk production became more expensive. Silkworm disease epidemics took vast tolls on French silk production, while Japan began exporting a great deal of silk, the same way that China had centuries ago. China was still the largest produce of fabric in the world, though with the advent of nylon and other modern fibers, silk was no longer as rare or as highly prized as it once was.

With the sericulture epidemic in France serving as a grim warning, Japan began to modernize its own silk production, and during this time they were the world's largest produces of silk. While Italy recovered from the European silkworm epidemic, France never would. For the most part, Italy and France stopped growing silk for export, and Japan began to import raw silk about the time that European silk manufacturers stopped. At this point, Japan and other Asian countries started to export more silk.

During the second World War, Japan did not export silk and the Western countries needed to find replacements. This is when fabrics like nylon started to see more use, and after the events of World War II, Japanese silk production never improved.

With new technology creating improvements in silk production in general, and with new and exciting fabrics coming up, Japan was still the world's leader in raw silk exports after the Second World war. By the seventies, however, product had declined and Japan stopped exporting raw silk.

China remains the world's largest producer of silk. In 1996, China produced 58,000 tons, followed in second place by India with 13,000 tons. Japan's production is very small at around 2,500 tons. In 1995 and 1997, China's silk production decreased to an astonishing 40%. The demand globally for silk in the 1990s also declined but the production was still strong in the United Kingdom and India. Silk's reputation has been tarnished due to the low quality of the fabric.

Today, 125, 000 tons of silk is still being produced around the world. The majority of the production is in China. Other countries that are producing silk are Japan, United States, Brazil, Vietnam, Uzbekistan, Korea, India, and Thailand. The United States is the largest silk importer presently.

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