
Making Cinnabar Red Pigment — Grinding Mercury Sulfide into the Most Vivid Red of the Ancient World
Cinnabar (HgS, mercury sulfide) is a brilliant vermilion-red mineral pigment that has been prized since at least 5000 BCE. It produces the most vivid, saturated red available to painters before the invention of synthetic alternatives — no earth pigment (red ochre, haematite) comes close to cinnabar's intensity and purity of hue. The mineral was mined in Spain (Almadén — the world's largest mercury deposit), China (Hunan province), and Italy (Monte Amiata), and was traded across the ancient world at enormous cost.
Chinese cinnabar paintings from the Neolithic Yangshao culture (c. 5000 BCE) are among the earliest known uses. In Rome, cinnabar (called 'minium' — later confused with red lead) was the most expensive pigment on the market, costing up to 50 sesterces per pound. Pliny records that the Roman state controlled its price. Pompeian wall paintings used cinnabar lavishly for the famous 'Pompeian red' backgrounds. In Chinese art, cinnabar has been used continuously for over 7,000 years — for lacquerware, seal paste (yìnní, 印泥), wall paintings, and manuscript illumination.
SAFETY WARNING: Cinnabar is mercury sulfide. While the mineral form (HgS) is relatively insoluble and less toxic than metallic mercury or mercury salts, the dust produced during grinding is hazardous — inhaled mercury sulfide dust accumulates in the body over time and causes chronic mercury poisoning (erethism: tremors, personality changes, kidney damage). ALL grinding of cinnabar MUST be done wet (under water or oil) to prevent dust, and a P100/FFP3 respirator must be worn during any dry handling. Never heat cinnabar — above 580°C it decomposes into elemental mercury vapour, which is acutely toxic.
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