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Beyond Beauty: The Brutal History of Natural Pearls
14 Dec
Summary
- Pearls fueled a violent trade with enslaved laborers, both indigenous and African.
- Massive shell middens reveal the enormous scale of oyster harvesting.
- The baroque pearl became a metaphor for empire's ungovernable complexity.

The history of natural pearls is deeply entwined with the violent realities of imperialism and human exploitation. Emerging from the 16th and 17th century Atlantic world, a new, unexpected source of pearls off the coast of modern-day Venezuela fueled a brutal trade. This led to the coerced and enslaved labor of indigenous and African divers, who faced horrific conditions and immense physical danger in their quest for these coveted jewels.
The environmental toll was catastrophic, with billions of oysters harvested, leaving behind vast shell middens as evidence. Divers endured ruptured eardrums and beatings, their plight documented as an early atrocity of Spanish expansion. The pearl's journey from ocean floor to global markets was paved with suffering, a stark contrast to its image of serenity and luxury.



