Wearing silver jewelry is widespread because of its beauty luster and compatibility with many fashions and occasions and the possibility of forming it easily as well but many people do not consider it a jewelry that lasts a long time. This is because a layer of erosion begins to appear on it with the passage of time losing its luster and then it is neglected and may be thrown by some as well but it does not require more than caring for it and cleaning it every once in a while; To preserve its shine and value and to avoid changing its color there are also many methods by which the silver ring can be cleaned from the matte layer that accumulates on it.
Around the year 1200 BC the Lorium mines near Athens became the first producer of silver and about four hundred years later trade of this metal spread between the Greek islands and North Africa especially Pharaonic Egypt in addition to the Phoenician coast which provided enough for its use in industries and fields Other than jewelery decorative tools and medicine that is coinage is minted from it and considered a measure of the value of goods and services.
Greece remained the largest producer of silver for nearly a thousand years which ended in the fourth century BC but the Carthaginians compensated for the scarcity of Greek mines by investing in Spanish mines which led the production of silver for a thousand years until the Arab conquest of Andalusia.
It is not certain that production in the Middle Ages significantly exceeded the ceiling of one and a half million ounces per year that was previously produced by the Greek Lorium mines and although Spanish production prevailed throughout the first millennium AD it did not disturb the balance between supply and demand which remained in place due to scarcity. The mines of Greece the Aegean and Anatolia.
It has become an indispensable part of our daily life and is our most favorite silver accessory