Von Stahel und Eysen

Von Stahel und Eysen (English: On Steel and Iron) is the first printed book on metallurgy, published in 1532 by several publishers: Kunegunde Hergot in Nuremberg, Melchior Sachs in Erfurt, and Peter Jordan in Mainz. It has been suggested that Hergot was probably the first, as the material seems to come from Nuremberg.[1]

About half the text is on how to harden iron and steel through tempering and quenching, mentioning water, but also a range of recipes of varying degrees of elaborateness.[2] The recipe 'take clarified honey, fresh urine of a he-goat, alum, borax, oliver oil, and salt; mix everything well together and quench therein' might, through the urea content of the urine (H2NCONH2), have helped to produce nitrated, 'case-hardened' iron. Less likely to have been efficacious is: 'take varnish, dragon's blood, horn scrapings, half as much salt, juice made from earthworms, radish juice, tallow, and vervain and quench therein. It is also very advantageous in hardening if a piece that is to be hardened is first thoroughly cleaned and well polished'.[3] This material is similar enough to the short treatise on hardening iron beginning 'Von dem herten. Nu spricht meister Alkaym' in the late fourteenth- or early fifteenth-century manuscript Nürnberger Handschrift GNM 3227a to suggest that Von Stahel und Eysen was composed in Nuremberg.[4]

A modern commentator on some of the more outlandish techniques in the book noted: "There isn't really much to say...except that perhaps it was meant to trip up rivals. However, this may not be the case because similar instructions were circulated in 1708 in Nuremberg."[5]

The text also includes techniques for colouring, soldering, and etching. Etching was quite a new technology at the time, and Von Stahel und Eysen provides the first attested recipes.[6]

Translations

References

  1. William Eamon (1996). Science and the Secrets of Nature: Books of Secrets in Medieval and Early Modern Culture. Princeton University Press. pp. 119–120. ISBN 0-691-02602-5.
  2. John D. Verhoeven (2007). Steel Metallurgy for the Non-Metallurgist. ASM International. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-61503-056-9.
  3. Rolf E. Hummel, Understanding Materials Science: History · Properties · Applications (New York: Springer, 1998), p. 7.
  4. William Eamon, Science and the Secrets of Nature: Books of Secrets in Medieval and Early Modern Culture (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994), pp. 119-20 (cf. pp. 86-87).
  5. Hans Berns (1 February 2013). The History of Hardening. Härterei Gerster AG. pp. 43–5. ISBN 978-3-033-03889-9.
  6. William Eamon, Science and the Secrets of Nature: Books of Secrets in Medieval and Early Modern Culture (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994), p. 120.
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