Red

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Red may be any of a number of similar colors at the lowest frequencies of light discernible by the human eye. Red is one of three primary colors of light, along with green and blue. Red light has a wavelength range of roughly 625-760 nm. Lower frequencies are called infrared, or below red and cannot be seen by human eyes, although some infrared frequencies can be felt as heat.[1]

Red is supposedly the first color perceived by Man. Brain-injured persons suffering from temporary color-blindness start to perceive red before they are able to discern any other colors. Neolithic hunter peoples considered red to be the most important color endowed with life-giving powers and thus placed red ocher into graves of their deceased. This explains funds of skeletons embedded in up to 10 kg of red powdered ocher. Neolithic cave painters ascribed magic powers to the color red. The word "magic" ("Zauber" in German) translates to "taufr" in Old Norse and is related to the Anglo-Saxon "teafor" meaning "red ocher". It can be stipulated that they painted animals in red ocher or iron oxide to conjure their fertility.

Protective powers of the color red against evil influence were common belief. Objects, animals and trees were covered in red paint, warriors painted their axes and spear-catapults red to endow the weapons with magic powers. Some of the Australian aborigines abide by this custom up to the present times. Neolithic hunters and germanic warriors used to paint their weapons and even themselves in blood of slain animals. Roman gladiators drank blood of their dying adversaries to take over their strength. In other cultures, the newly born were bathed in blood of particularly strong and good looking animals.
Arnolfini Wedding by Jan Van Eyck 1434
Red painted amulets or red gems, such as ruby or garnet, were used as charms against the "evil eye". Wearing a red ruby was supposed to bring about invincibility. Red bed-clothes were customary in Germany up to the Middle Ages as protection against the "red illnesses", such as fever, rashes or even miscarriages (famous example is the painting Arnolfini Wedding by Jan Van Eyck, dated 1434).[2]











References

  1. http://www.flickr.com/photos/lensop/sets/72157594342268252/
  2. http://webexhibits.org/pigments/indiv/color/reds2.html