Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Atramentum> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 35 of
35
with 100 triples per page.
- Atramentum abstract "Atramentum or atrament, generally means a very black, usually liquid, substance. For example, an octopus may emit a puff of atrament (see cephalopod ink).In ancient Rome, the term atramentum signified any black colouring substance used for any purpose. The Romans distinguished three principal kinds of atramentum, one called librarium (or scriptorium), another called sutorium, the third tectorium. Atramentum librarium was the writing ink of Roman times, atramentum sutorium was used by shoemakers for dyeing leather, atramentum tectorium (or pidorium) was used by painters for some purposes, apparently as a sort of varnish.Atramentous is a related adjective which means \"black as ink\". Historically, to atrament something would mean to write something down with ink. The word atrament is related to modern English atrocious: both originate from Latin atrare, which presumably meant to make something black.According to the pigment handbook, atramentum is a historical pigment or ink based on carbon black. Apelles is credited of manufacturing method for atramentum elephantinum from burning ivory.In one modern commercial usage of the word, atramentum is deep black coloring substance manufactured by a reaction of an iron salt with tannic acid (the tannic acid for this purpose is often extracted from oak bark). It is a historically important black dye or pigment fundamentally different from carbon black or black iron oxide pigments. It was also sometimes called \"ink stone\". It appears greyish-black in water but the colour becomes very deep and lustrous in linseed oil.The iron-based atramentum called iron gall ink was in popular use from about the 12th to 19th century. It is currently a subject of conservation effort since many valuable collections are written using it but it causes ink corrosion.".
- Atramentum thumbnail Inkstands_from_Pompeii.jpg?width=300.
- Atramentum wikiPageID "14037951".
- Atramentum wikiPageLength "2811".
- Atramentum wikiPageOutDegree "16".
- Atramentum wikiPageRevisionID "702890506".
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Apelles.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Carbon_black.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pigments.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Cephalopod_ink.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Coprinopsis_atramentaria.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Dye.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Ink.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Iron_gall_ink.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Iron_oxide.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Ivory.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Linseed_oil.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Pigment.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Tannic_acid.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink Victaphanta_atramentaria.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLink File:Inkstands_from_Pompeii.jpg.
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLinkText "Atramentum".
- Atramentum wikiPageWikiLinkText "atramentum".
- Atramentum wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Atramentum subject Category:Pigments.
- Atramentum comment "Atramentum or atrament, generally means a very black, usually liquid, substance. For example, an octopus may emit a puff of atrament (see cephalopod ink).In ancient Rome, the term atramentum signified any black colouring substance used for any purpose. The Romans distinguished three principal kinds of atramentum, one called librarium (or scriptorium), another called sutorium, the third tectorium.".
- Atramentum label "Atramentum".
- Atramentum sameAs Q13581435.
- Atramentum sameAs Atramento.
- Atramentum sameAs m.03crrmb.
- Atramentum sameAs Q13581435.
- Atramentum wasDerivedFrom Atramentum?oldid=702890506.
- Atramentum depiction Inkstands_from_Pompeii.jpg.
- Atramentum isPrimaryTopicOf Atramentum.