A mirror is a flat or curved surface with a reflective reflection of glass. Mirrors are also used in technology and are i...

When were mirrors invented? | History of Mirror | World First Mirror

A mirror is a flat or curved surface with a reflective reflection of glass. Mirrors are also used in technology and are important components in scientific instruments such as binoculars, industrial systems, cameras and lasers.

People will probably start to see their reflection in the pools of water, streams and rivers with the first reflection. The earliest mirrors were made of polished stone, and the mirrors were made of black volcanic obsidian glass. Some examples of this type of mirror have been found in Turkey at least 6000 years ago. The ancient Egyptians used polished copper to make mirrors, and often the round face of the mirror was decorated with ornaments. Ancient Mesopotamians also identified mirrors made of polished metal mirrors and polished stone around 2000 and in East Central and South America. In China, mirrors began to be made from metal alloys. A mixture of tin and copper called spiculum metal can be highly polished to reflective surfaces as well as mirrors made of polished bronze. In ancient times metal alloys or precious metal mirrors were extremely valuable items only the very rich could afford.

World first mirror

RCs made of this type of metal back glass are believed to have been made in Lebanon in the first century, and the Romans made crude mirrors out of glass blown on the back of the front.

Ancient Egyptians, Romans and Greeks loved mirrors and often made polished copper and bronze. The first glass mirrors were made during the 3rd century AD and were common in Egypt, Gaul, Germany and Asia. The invention of the glass blowing method in the 14th century led to the invention of the convex mirror which increased the popularity of glass mirrors ...

Making a mirror

A major mirror element is glass. Glass is a poor reflector, it needs to be coated to make a mirror. The most suitable materials for making metal coatings are silver, gold and chrome.

Mirror Facts

Concepts of the soul are often associated with mirrors, resulting in superstitions around mirrors. For example, breaking a mirror damages the fate of a seven-year-old because the spirit that breaks a broken mirror regenerates every seven years (Old Roman legend). Mirrors also have a strong connection with souls. Mirrors are protected when someone dies, because according to some superstitions, a mirror can trap the soul of a dead person.

Interesting facts of the mirror

During the Renaissance in Europe, mirrors were made by the method of coating glass with a mixture of tin and mercury. In the sixteenth century, Venice became the center of such mirrors. A factory was set up in France for the manufacture of mirrors called Saint-Gobain, but the mirrors were still expensive luxuries and belonged only to the rich.

 In 1835, a German chemist named Justus von Liebig made a silver glass mirror where a thin layer of metallic silver is placed on the glass by the chemical decomposition of silver nitrate. The invention of this process enabled mass-produced mirrors, and for the first time in history, ordinary people were able to purchase mirrors. Current mirrors are more often made by vacuum depositing aluminum directly on the glass.

There are many superstitions with mirrors. To this day, breaking a mirror is said to be a misfortune that lasts for seven years. This curse is believed to go back to Roman times when they thought it would take seven years to renew themselves. One way to save yourself from being unlucky is to bury all the pieces of the broken mirror very deep in the ground. It is also said that a mirror in a house falling from a wall is a sign that someone is going to die. It was common practice to hide all the mirrors in the house when someone died. It was believed that this would prevent the spirit of the dead from getting caught in one of Satan's mirrors.

Who invented the mirror?

Silver glass mirrors found around the world today first originated in Germany about 200 years ago.

In 1835, the German chemist Justice von Liebig developed the process of applying a thin layer of metallic silver to one side of a clear glass fruit. This technique was soon adapted and modified, resulting in large-scale production of mirrors.

Modern mirrors may have originated in the 19th century, but mirrors in general have survived for many years. Visual scientist in the journal Optometry and Vision Science. According to a 2006 review by Jay Enoch, the people of Natolia - modern-day Turkey made the first mirrors on the ground and out of polished obsidian (volcanic glass) about 8000 years ago.

Mirrors made of polished copper later fell in Mesopotamia (now Iraq) and Egypt from 4000 to 3000 BC. About a thousand years later, people in Central and South America began making mirrors out of polished stone, while Chinese and Indian mirror makers made them bronze.

In the first century A.D. In, the Roman writer Pliny the Elder mentions the first recorded use of glass mirrors in the natural history of his encyclopedia, but the mirrors were never used at that time.

Although different cultures have independently produced mirrors that reflect different times in history, perhaps nature should be anointed as the inventor of the discovery glass. Enoch wrote: “The earliest mirrors were usually in calm lakes and in rocks or earthen vessels. Of course, these natural mirrors are paler than today's manufactured mirrors.

But not everyone in the world has welcomed the introduction of mirrors.

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