Ironically,
the answer to our quest for
Sapphire’s earliest
roots may lie in the same book by Pliny. However, it lies
in an earlier chapter that describes one of the four varieties of a gem variety that was known to the ancients as Indian
or Oriental
Amethyst.
Pliny states: “
… A third stone (Variety of Oriental Amethyst) of this class is of a more diluted color, and
is known as ‘Sapenos’…” Although, there is a
lack of conclusive proof, Pliny’s description
of ‘
Sapenos’ as a type of bluish-violet
Amethyst appears to be far closer both in etymological name, color
and geographical location to what we now know as
Sapphire. It is quite probable that Pliny's description of ‘
Sapenos', as a type of Oriental
Amethyst, was the birth of the term we now use for the modern
Sapphire.