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Pendo Sensations
74%Seller Score
164 Followers
Shipping speed: Poor
Quality Score: Excellent
Store
your jewellery in the box it arrives in. This will
protect it against damage, moisture and UV rays (which can affect
certain crystals).
To keep your jewellery looking its best please
do not get your jewellery wet. Avoid wearing with creams and perfumes
and always take off before showering. Jewellery can be cleaned by gently
polishing with a dry cloth.
In Revelation 21:18-20, John names twelve bible stones that adorn the
foundation of the New Jerusalem. "The wall was of jasper: and the city
was pur3 gold, like unto clear glass. The foundations of the wall of
the city were adorned with all kinds of semiprecious stones: the first
foundation was jasper, the second sapphire, the third chalcedony, the
fourth emerald, the fifth sardonyx, the sixth sardius, the seventh
chrysolyte, the eighth beryl, the ninth topaz, the tenth chrysoprase,
the eleventh jacinth, and the twelfth amethyst."
History:
In 1272,
while in western China Marco Polo wrote,
“Chalcedony and jasper, which are taken for sale to Cathay (the populous eastern provinces), and such
is their abundance that they form a considerable commerce.” This is a key, for
the gemstones that Marco Polo thought were chalcedony and jasper are in fact
white
jade
and
spinach jade
from Xinjiang
Province in west China. These two nephrite jades have colours similar to chalcedony and jasper, (familiar stones in Marco Polo’s home country Italy). This helps us to identify both jewels from
Revelation 21.
CHALKEDÓN is
white jade,
and ÍASPIS is
spinach
green jade.
Jade jewels are costly; the white and green jades are both elegant jewel stones
and well suited to carving. Modern chalcedony gets its name from
Chalcedon, an ancient Greek seaport of the
eastern Aegean Sea known for the jewel trade. But Pliny the Roman historian described
CHALKEDÓN as
different from modern chalcedony; (in his time white jade was evidently marketed under that name).
Crystal Information
Crystals have inclusions, which
appear naturally in gemstones. Sometimes they can be accidentally
mistaken as cracks, but they're actually minerals that have been trapped
within the crystal as it has grown. Inclusions are perfectly natural
and make each individual crystal unique. They're part of the crystal's
natural beauty and history.
White stones: jade, chalcedony, opal, alabaster, marble
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