As a result of the aquired wealth from Eastern lands, illuminary treatise were written by European
monks of the Benedictine and Franciscan orders called
‘Lapidaries’. These books were written with the intention
of documenting and educating aristocracy, doctors and religious men
on the newly imported philosophies, academics and materials won from the crusades. One such book was ‘De
Lapidibus’ written by Marbodei, or Marbode of
Rennes, a Franciscan monk who lived during the 10th and 11th
Centuries. In the 'Gemmis' (Gems) section of the book, Marbode extols the magical virtues
of gemstones and their curative properties. One gem he wrote on was the ‘Crisolite’, or 'Golden Stone' as
it is also known: “Crisolite: to exert its full power, tis required
to be set in gold; worn in this way it dispels the
vague terrors of the night. If, however, it were to
be used as a protection from the wiles of evil spirits,
the stone had to be pierced and strung on the hair
of an ass and then attached to the left arm.”