
Dear Board Member,
I would be grateful for any information on the mark and the origin of this item.
Thank you.
Kind regards,
Fred
oel wrote:Hi Fred,
The mark to the left modern simplified Chinese characters for pure silver. The Chinese word "pure"when used as a precious metal mark, indicates a metal fineness that, up until 2015, was 995 or higher, but which has since legally been reduced to 990. The actual Chinese character for pure also translates as meaning ample, enough, or sufficient. How the meaning translates in Chinese depends on how the character is used in conjunction with the characters for a precious metal such as gold or silver. It is in these combinations that the translation becomes "pure"gold or pure silver.
Souce; World Hallmarks Volme II Asia, Middle East, Africa
Peter.
oel wrote:Hi Fred,
The mark to the left modern simplified Chinese characters for pure silver. The Chinese word "pure"when used as a precious metal mark, indicates a metal fineness that, up until 2015, was 995 or higher, but which has since legally been reduced to 990. The actual Chinese character for pure also translates as meaning ample, enough, or sufficient. How the meaning translates in Chinese depends on how the character is used in conjunction with the characters for a precious metal such as gold or silver. It is in these combinations that the translation becomes "pure"gold or pure silver.
Souce; World Hallmarks Volme II Asia, Middle East, Africa
Peter.
oel wrote:Hi Markspirit,
Welcome to the forum. Thanks for your contribution with extra information. Much appreciated.
Regards,
Peter
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