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OF RAW MATERIALS.
(212.) We may trace the relative influence of the two causes above referred to, in the prices of fine gold chains made at Venice. The sizes of these chains are known by numbers, the smallest having been (in 1828) No. 1, and the numbers 2, 3, 4, &c. progressively increasing in size. The following Table shews the numbers and the prices of those made at that time.[1] The first column gives the number by which the chain is known; the second expresses the weight in grains of one inch in length of each chain; the third column the number of links in the same length; and the last expresses the price, in francs worth ten-pence each, of a Venetian braccio, or about two English feet of each chain.
No. | Weight of One Inch, in Grains. |
Number of Links in One Inch. |
Price of a Venetian Braccio, equal to Two Feet 18 Inch English. |
0 1 112 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 24 |
.44 .56 .77 .99 1.46 1.61 2.09 2.61 3.36 3.65 3.72 5.35 9.71 |
98 to 100 92 88 84 72 64 64 60 56 56 56 50 32 |
60 francs. 40 26 20 20 21 23 24 27 29 32 34 60 |
- ↑ A still finer chain is now manufactured (1832).