In the pre-modern world, purple color was seen as a status symbol as it was incredibly expensive to make.
Until this guy named William Henry Perkin accidentally discovered how to make synthetic purple dye in 1856.
Millennia of elite status of purple color gone just like that.
The ancients used to make purple color from sea snails found in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.
It was extremely expensive and time consuming to make and it became symbol of elite and royalty, known as Tyrian purple or imperial purple.
The dye was so expensive to make because 12,000 snails of the Murex brandaris species were needed for just 1.4 g of pure dye, which was only enough to color only the trim of a single garment.
Such was the difficulty of obtaining this precious color!
The Tyrian purple was used by the likes of Phoenicians, Greeks and ancient Romans where it was used by emperors, members of elite and for special occasions.
In the Middle Ages, Byzantium continued to use it.
In the West, however, scarlet red color began replacing purple as the royal color.
This was due to difficulties to obtain the precious Tyrian purple, especially after the fall of Constantinople in 1453.
The Catholic Church hierarchy gradually began adopting red as well.
During the time of Charlemagne, the bishops and cardinals in Rome still wore Tyrian purple.
But by the end of the Middle Ages the cardinals began wearing scarlet red made from kermes!
In the West, red was important as a color of martyrs and sacrifice and was also associated with crusades as crusaders wore red cross on a white mantle.
The color gules (red) also became the most popular heraldic tincture and was most commonly used on coats of arms of Western nobles.
The flag of Rome today is dark red and yellow.
These are now the colors of the Romans.
While purple is associated with historic Roman Empire and Byzantium, it hasn't been associated with Rome for some time.
Because of these reasons, the color purple did not have a significant presence in the West by the time William Henry Perkin invented the purple dye in 19th century.
This is reflected in the fact that no European national flag uses purple color!
The only exception was the flag of the Second Spanish Republic which came into existence in 1931, at the time when the color purple could already be produced industrially.
But it ceased to exist in 1939 and no European country has had purple on its flag since.
It's interesting how William Henry Perkin discovered how to make purple completely accidentally.
He was only 18 at the time and was doing some experiments in his crude laboratory trying synthesize quinine.
When he cleaned the flasks with alcohol he noticed intense purple color.
Perkin called the dye that he produced mauveine and once it was tested that it could successfully color silk and other textiles, it became commercialized.
The color purple has been cheap to produce ever since.
I find this very symbolic as it shows how the Industrial Revolution completely changed certain old standards overnight.
This Charlemagne's silk shroud was colored with the finest Tyrian purple!
It was worth a fortune at the time.
But now we could easily produce such color.
Since there is a lot of interest in this, I would like to promote this great short thread made by friend @HistoryinStory on cochineal dye which the Europeans found in the New World and instantly became highly valued for its intense red color!
In 1927 Benito Mussolini ordered to drain the Lake Nemi south of Rome to recover the wrecks of the Nemi ships, two large pleasure barges built under the reign of the Roman emperor Caligula.
Unfortunately the remains of the ships were destroyed by fire in 1944 during WWII.
It is speculated that Nemi ships were elaborate floating palaces, with mosaic floors, heating and plumbing, baths, galleries and saloons, as well as a large variety of vines and fruit trees, similar to other Caligula's galleys described by Suetonius!
Lake Nemi is a volcanic lake which was popular by wealthy Romans due to clean air and uncontaminated water and cooler temperatures during the hot summer months.
It's crazy how Americans bought the myth that during the time of Columbus people thought that the earth was flat, a complete lie popularized by quasi-historian Washington Irving in 1828.
This globe was literally made before Columbus' discovery, and has no America on it.
Washington Irving completely invented a fictional dialogue between Columbus and the Council of Salamanca, where the clergy supposedly objected him on the ground that the earth was flat.
His fraudulent book would become the most popular book on Columbus in English-speaking world.
This lie was then picked on in America and expended as some sort of anti-Catholic anti-medieval founding myth, where Columbus was supposedly representing enlightenment rationalism against irrationality and dogmatism of the Church.
The idea that monarchy and republic are opposed to each other is a modern thing.
The term republic (res publica) was often used to describe medieval kingdoms.
Even by 16th century the Kingdom of France was still called both a republic and a monarchy at the same time!
The Kingdom of France defined itself by the phrase of "chose publique" (res publica) from 1350s to 1580s, also using the word respublique, to describe the relation between the King of France and his subject.
The term was then replaced by State (État).
The absolutist French monarchy which emerged in 17th century preferred the term State over republic, and talked of the "good of the State".
However the term state also comes from earlier medieval concepts like status regis at regni (the state of the king and the kingdom).