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Wikipedia

Black

Black is a color which results from the absence or complete absorption of visible light. It is an achromatic color, without hue, like white and grey.[1] It is often used symbolically or figuratively to represent darkness.[2] Black and white have often been used to describe opposites such as good and evil, the Dark Ages versus Age of Enlightenment, and night versus day. Since the Middle Ages, black has been the symbolic color of solemnity and authority, and for this reason it is still commonly worn by judges and magistrates.[2]

Black
 
Clockwise, from top left: Anubis statue; American black bear; Galaxy NGC 406; The Supreme Court of the United States; Portait painting of Queen Victoria.
    Color coordinates
Hex triplet#000000
sRGBB (r, g, b)(0, 0, 0)
CMYKH (c, m, y, k)(0, 0, 0, 100)
HSV (h, s, v)(0°, 0%, 0%)
CIELChuv (L, C, h)(0, 0, 0°)
SourceBy definition
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte)
H: Normalized to [0–100] (hundred)

Black was one of the first colors used by artists in Neolithic cave paintings.[3] It was used in ancient Egypt and Greece as the color of the underworld.[4] In the Roman Empire, it became the color of mourning, and over the centuries it was frequently associated with death, evil, witches, and magic.[5] In the 14th century, it was worn by royalty, clergy, judges, and government officials in much of Europe. It became the color worn by English romantic poets, businessmen and statesmen in the 19th century, and a high fashion color in the 20th century.[2] According to surveys in Europe and North America, it is the color most commonly associated with mourning, the end, secrets, magic, force, violence, fear, evil, and elegance.[6]

Black is the most common ink color used for printing books, newspapers and documents, as it provides the highest contrast with white paper and thus is the easiest color to read. Similarly, black text on a white screen is the most common format used on computer screens.[7] As of September 2019, the darkest material is made by MIT engineers from vertically aligned carbon nanotubes.[8]

Etymology

The word black comes from Old English blæc ("black, dark", also, "ink"), from Proto-Germanic *blakkaz ("burned"), from Proto-Indo-European *bhleg- ("to burn, gleam, shine, flash"), from base *bhel- ("to shine"), related to Old Saxon blak ("ink"), Old High German blach ("black"), Old Norse blakkr ("dark"), Dutch blaken ("to burn"), and Swedish bläck ("ink"). More distant cognates include Latin flagrare ("to blaze, glow, burn"), and Ancient Greek phlegein ("to burn, scorch"). The Ancient Greeks sometimes used the same word to name different colors, if they had the same intensity. Kuanos' could mean both dark blue and black.[9] The Ancient Romans had two words for black: ater was a flat, dull black, while niger was a brilliant, saturated black. Ater has vanished from the vocabulary, but niger was the source of the country name Nigeria,[10] the English word Negro, and the word for "black" in most modern Romance languages (French: noir; Spanish and Portuguese: negro; Italian: nero; Romanian: negru).

Old High German also had two words for black: swartz for dull black and blach for a luminous black. These are parallelled in Middle English by the terms swart for dull black and blaek for luminous black. Swart still survives as the word swarthy, while blaek became the modern English black.[9] The former is cognate with the words used for black in most modern Germanic languages aside from English (German: schwarz, Dutch: zwart, Swedish: svart, Danish: sort, Icelandic: svartr).[11] In heraldry, the word used for the black color is sable,[12] named for the black fur of the sable, an animal.

Art

Prehistoric

 
Megaloceros cave art at Lascaux

Black was one of the first colors used in art. The Lascaux Cave in France contains drawings of bulls and other animals drawn by paleolithic artists between 18,000 and 17,000 years ago. They began by using charcoal, and later achieved darker pigments by burning bones or grinding a powder of manganese oxide.[9]

Ancient

For the ancient Egyptians, black had positive associations; being the color of fertility and the rich black soil flooded by the Nile. It was the color of Anubis, the god of the underworld, who took the form of a black jackal, and offered protection against evil to the dead. To ancient Greeks, black represented the underworld, separated from the living by the river Acheron, whose water ran black. Those who had committed the worst sins were sent to Tartarus, the deepest and darkest level. In the center was the palace of Hades, the king of the underworld, where he was seated upon a black ebony throne. Black was one of the most important colors used by ancient Greek artists. In the 6th century BC, they began making black-figure pottery and later red figure pottery, using a highly original technique. In black-figure pottery, the artist would paint figures with a glossy clay slip on a red clay pot. When the pot was fired, the figures painted with the slip would turn black, against a red background. Later they reversed the process, painting the spaces between the figures with slip. This created magnificent red figures against a glossy black background.[13]

In the social hierarchy of ancient Rome, purple was the color reserved for the Emperor; red was the color worn by soldiers (red cloaks for the officers, red tunics for the soldiers); white the color worn by the priests, and black was worn by craftsmen and artisans. The black they wore was not deep and rich; the vegetable dyes used to make black were not solid or lasting, so the blacks often faded to gray or brown.[14]

In Latin, the word for black, ater and to darken, atere, were associated with cruelty, brutality and evil. They were the root of the English words "atrocious" and "atrocity".[15] Black was also the Roman color of death and mourning. In the 2nd century BC Roman magistrates began to wear a dark toga, called a toga pulla, to funeral ceremonies. Later, under the Empire, the family of the deceased also wore dark colors for a long period; then, after a banquet to mark the end of mourning, exchanged the black for a white toga. In Roman poetry, death was called the hora nigra, the black hour.[9]

The German and Scandinavian peoples worshipped their own goddess of the night, Nótt, who crossed the sky in a chariot drawn by a black horse. They also feared Hel, the goddess of the kingdom of the dead, whose skin was black on one side and red on the other. They also held sacred the raven. They believed that Odin, the king of the Nordic pantheon, had two black ravens, Huginn and Muninn, who served as his agents, traveling the world for him, watching and listening.[16]

Postclassical

In the early Middle Ages, black was commonly associated with darkness and evil. In Medieval paintings, the devil was usually depicted as having human form, but with wings and black skin or hair.[17]

12th and 13th centuries

In fashion, black did not have the prestige of red, the color of the nobility. It was worn by Benedictine monks as a sign of humility and penitence. In the 12th century a famous theological dispute broke out between the Cistercian monks, who wore white, and the Benedictines, who wore black. A Benedictine abbot, Pierre the Venerable, accused the Cistercians of excessive pride in wearing white instead of black. Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, the founder of the Cistercians responded that black was the color of the devil, hell, "of death and sin", while white represented "purity, innocence and all the virtues".[18]

Black symbolized both power and secrecy in the medieval world. The emblem of the Holy Roman Empire of Germany was a black eagle. The black knight in the poetry of the Middle Ages was an enigmatic figure, hiding his identity, usually wrapped in secrecy.[19]

Black ink, invented in China, was traditionally used in the Middle Ages for writing, for the simple reason that black was the darkest color and therefore provided the greatest contrast with white paper or parchment, making it the easiest color to read. It became even more important in the 15th century, with the invention of printing. A new kind of ink, printer's ink, was created out of soot, turpentine and walnut oil. The new ink made it possible to spread ideas to a mass audience through printed books, and to popularize art through black and white engravings and prints. Because of its contrast and clarity, black ink on white paper continued to be the standard for printing books, newspapers and documents; and for the same reason black text on a white background is the most common format used on computer screens.[7]

14th and 15th centuries

In the early Middle Ages, princes, nobles and the wealthy usually wore bright colors, particularly scarlet cloaks from Italy. Black was rarely part of the wardrobe of a noble family. The one exception was the fur of the sable. This glossy black fur, from an animal of the marten family, was the finest and most expensive fur in Europe. It was imported from Russia and Poland and used to trim the robes and gowns of royalty.

In the 14th century, the status of black began to change. First, high-quality black dyes began to arrive on the market, allowing garments of a deep, rich black. Magistrates and government officials began to wear black robes, as a sign of the importance and seriousness of their positions. A third reason was the passage of sumptuary laws in some parts of Europe which prohibited the wearing of costly clothes and certain colors by anyone except members of the nobility. The famous bright scarlet cloaks from Venice and the peacock blue fabrics from Florence were restricted to the nobility. The wealthy bankers and merchants of northern Italy responded by changing to black robes and gowns, made with the most expensive fabrics.[20]

The change to the more austere but elegant black was quickly picked up by the kings and nobility. It began in northern Italy, where the Duke of Milan and the Count of Savoy and the rulers of Mantua, Ferrara, Rimini and Urbino began to dress in black. It then spread to France, led by Louis I, Duke of Orleans, younger brother of King Charles VI of France. It moved to England at the end of the reign of King Richard II (1377–1399), where all the court began to wear black. In 1419–20, black became the color of the powerful Duke of Burgundy, Philip the Good. It moved to Spain, where it became the color of the Spanish Habsburgs, of Charles V and of his son, Philip II of Spain (1527–1598). European rulers saw it as the color of power, dignity, humility and temperance. By the end of the 16th century, it was the color worn by almost all the monarchs of Europe and their courts.[21]

Modern

16th and 17th centuries

While black was the color worn by the Catholic rulers of Europe, it was also the emblematic color of the Protestant Reformation in Europe and the Puritans in England and America. John Calvin, Philip Melanchthon and other Protestant theologians denounced the richly colored and decorated interiors of Roman Catholic churches. They saw the color red, worn by the Pope and his Cardinals, as the color of luxury, sin, and human folly.[22] In some northern European cities, mobs attacked churches and cathedrals, smashed the stained glass windows and defaced the statues and decoration. In Protestant doctrine, clothing was required to be sober, simple and discreet. Bright colors were banished and replaced by blacks, browns and grays; women and children were recommended to wear white.[23]

In the Protestant Netherlands, Rembrandt used this sober new palette of blacks and browns to create portraits whose faces emerged from the shadows expressing the deepest human emotions. The Catholic painters of the Counter-Reformation, like Rubens, went in the opposite direction; they filled their paintings with bright and rich colors. The new Baroque churches of the Counter-Reformation were usually shining white inside and filled with statues, frescoes, marble, gold and colorful paintings, to appeal to the public. But European Catholics of all classes, like Protestants, eventually adopted a sober wardrobe that was mostly black, brown and gray.[24]

In the second part of the 17th century, Europe and America experienced an epidemic of fear of witchcraft. People widely believed that the devil appeared at midnight in a ceremony called a Black Mass or black sabbath, usually in the form of a black animal, often a goat, a dog, a wolf, a bear, a deer or a rooster, accompanied by their familiar spirits, black cats, serpents and other black creatures. This was the origin of the widespread superstition about black cats and other black animals. In medieval Flanders, in a ceremony called Kattenstoet, black cats were thrown from the belfry of the Cloth Hall of Ypres to ward off witchcraft.[26]

Witch trials were common in both Europe and America during this period. During the notorious Salem witch trials in New England in 1692–93, one of those on trial was accused of being able turn into a "black thing with a blue cap," and others of having familiars in the form of a black dog, a black cat and a black bird.[27] Nineteen women and men were hanged as witches.[28]

18th and 19th centuries

In the 18th century, during the European Age of Enlightenment, black receded as a fashion color. Paris became the fashion capital, and pastels, blues, greens, yellow and white became the colors of the nobility and upper classes. But after the French Revolution, black again became the dominant color.

Black was the color of the industrial revolution, largely fueled by coal, and later by oil. Thanks to coal smoke, the buildings of the large cities of Europe and America gradually turned black. By 1846 the industrial area of the West Midlands of England was "commonly called 'the Black Country'”.[29] Charles Dickens and other writers described the dark streets and smoky skies of London, and they were vividly illustrated in the engravings of French artist Gustave Doré.

A different kind of black was an important part of the romantic movement in literature. Black was the color of melancholy, the dominant theme of romanticism. The novels of the period were filled with castles, ruins, dungeons, storms, and meetings at midnight. The leading poets of the movement were usually portrayed dressed in black, usually with a white shirt and open collar, and a scarf carelessly over their shoulder, Percy Bysshe Shelley and Lord Byron helped create the enduring stereotype of the romantic poet.

The invention of inexpensive synthetic black dyes and the industrialization of the textile industry meant that high-quality black clothes were available for the first time to the general population. In the 19th century black gradually became the most popular color of business dress of the upper and middle classes in England, the Continent, and America.

Black dominated literature and fashion in the 19th century, and played a large role in painting. James McNeill Whistler made the color the subject of his most famous painting, Arrangement in grey and black number one (1871), better known as Whistler's Mother.[30]

Some 19th-century French painters had a low opinion of black: "Reject black," Paul Gauguin said, "and that mix of black and white they call gray. Nothing is black, nothing is gray."[31] But Édouard Manet used blacks for their strength and dramatic effect. Manet's portrait of painter Berthe Morisot was a study in black which perfectly captured her spirit of independence. The black gave the painting power and immediacy; he even changed her eyes, which were green, to black to strengthen the effect.[32] Henri Matisse quoted the French impressionist Pissarro telling him, "Manet is stronger than us all – he made light with black."[33]

Pierre-Auguste Renoir used luminous blacks, especially in his portraits. When someone told him that black was not a color, Renoir replied: "What makes you think that? Black is the queen of colors. I always detested Prussian blue. I tried to replace black with a mixture of red and blue, I tried using cobalt blue or ultramarine, but I always came back to ivory black."[34]

Vincent van Gogh used black lines to outline many of the objects in his paintings, such as the bed in the famous painting of his bedroom. making them stand apart. His painting of black crows over a cornfield, painted shortly before he died, was particularly agitated and haunting. In the late 19th century, black also became the color of anarchism. (See the section political movements.)

20th and 21st centuries

In the 20th century, black was the color of Italian and German fascism. (See the section political movements.)

In art, black regained some of the territory that it had lost during the 19th century. The Russian painter Kasimir Malevich, a member of the Suprematist movement, created the Black Square in 1915, is widely considered the first purely abstract painting.[35] He wrote, "The painted work is no longer simply the imitation of reality, but is this very reality ... It is not a demonstration of ability, but the materialization of an idea."[36]

Black was also appreciated by Henri Matisse. "When I didn't know what color to put down, I put down black," he said in 1945. "Black is a force: I used black as ballast to simplify the construction ... Since the impressionists it seems to have made continuous progress, taking a more and more important part in color orchestration, comparable to that of the double bass as a solo instrument."[37]

In the 1950s, black came to be a symbol of individuality and intellectual and social rebellion, the color of those who didn't accept established norms and values. In Paris, it was worn by Left-Bank intellectuals and performers such as Juliette Gréco, and by some members of the Beat Movement in New York and San Francisco.[38] Black leather jackets were worn by motorcycle gangs such as the Hells Angels and street gangs on the fringes of society in the United States. Black as a color of rebellion was celebrated in such films as The Wild One, with Marlon Brando. By the end of the 20th century, black was the emblematic color of the punk subculture punk fashion, and the goth subculture. Goth fashion, which emerged in England in the 1980s, was inspired by Victorian era mourning dress.

In men's fashion, black gradually ceded its dominance to navy blue, particularly in business suits. Black evening dress and formal dress in general were worn less and less. In 1960, John F. Kennedy was the last American President to be inaugurated wearing formal dress; President Lyndon Johnson and all his successors were inaugurated wearing business suits.

Women's fashion was revolutionized and simplified in 1926 by the French designer Coco Chanel, who published a drawing of a simple black dress in Vogue magazine. She famously said, "A woman needs just three things; a black dress, a black sweater, and, on her arm, a man she loves."[38] French designer Jean Patou also followed suit by creating a black collection in 1929.[39] Other designers contributed to the trend of the little black dress. The Italian designer Gianni Versace said, "Black is the quintessence of simplicity and elegance," and French designer Yves Saint Laurent said, "black is the liaison which connects art and fashion.[38] One of the most famous black dresses of the century was designed by Hubert de Givenchy and was worn by Audrey Hepburn in the 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany's.

The American civil rights movement in the 1950s was a struggle for the political equality of African Americans. It developed into the Black Power movement in the early 1960s until the late 1980s, and the Black Lives Matter movement in the 2010s and 2020s. It also popularized the slogan "Black is Beautiful".

Science

Physics

In the visible spectrum, black is the result of the absorption of all colors. Black can be defined as the visual impression experienced when no visible light reaches the eye. Pigments or dyes that absorb light rather than reflect it back to the eye "look black". A black pigment can, however, result from a combination of several pigments that collectively absorb all colors. If appropriate proportions of three primary pigments are mixed, the result reflects so little light as to be called "black". This provides two superficially opposite but actually complementary descriptions of black. Black is the absorption of all colors of light, or an exhaustive combination of multiple colors of pigment.

 
Vantablack was the blackest substance known until 2019.[40][8]

In physics, a black body is a perfect absorber of light, but, by a thermodynamic rule, it is also the best emitter. Thus, the best radiative cooling, out of sunlight, is by using black paint, though it is important that it be black (a nearly perfect absorber) in the infrared as well. In elementary science, far ultraviolet light is called "black light" because, while itself unseen, it causes many minerals and other substances to fluoresce.

Absorption of light is contrasted by transmission, reflection and diffusion, where the light is only redirected, causing objects to appear transparent, reflective or white respectively. A material is said to be black if most incoming light is absorbed equally in the material. Light (electromagnetic radiation in the visible spectrum) interacts with the atoms and molecules, which causes the energy of the light to be converted into other forms of energy, usually heat. This means that black surfaces can act as thermal collectors, absorbing light and generating heat (see Solar thermal collector).

As of September 2019, the darkest material is made from vertically aligned carbon nanotubes. The material was grown by MIT engineers and was reported to have a 99.995% absorption rate of any incoming light.[8] This surpasses any former darkest materials including Vantablack, which has a peak absorption rate of 99.965% in the visible spectrum.[41]

Chemistry

Pigments

The earliest pigments used by Neolithic man were charcoal, red ocher and yellow ocher. The black lines of cave art were drawn with the tips of burnt torches made of a wood with resin.[42] Different charcoal pigments were made by burning different woods and animal products, each of which produced a different tone. The charcoal would be ground and then mixed with animal fat to make the pigment.

  • Vine black was produced in Roman times by burning the cut branches of grapevines. It could also be produced by burning the remains of the crushed grapes, which were collected and dried in an oven. According to the historian Vitruvius, the deepness and richness of the black produced corresponded to the quality of the wine. The finest wines produced a black with a bluish tinge the color of indigo.

The 15th-century painter Cennino Cennini described how this pigment was made during the Renaissance in his famous handbook for artists: "...there is a black which is made from the tendrils of vines. And these tendrils need to be burned. And when they have been burned, throw some water onto them and put them out and then mull them in the same way as the other black. And this is a lean and black pigment and is one of the perfect pigments that we use."[43]

Cennini also noted that "There is another black which is made from burnt almond shells or peaches and this is a perfect, fine black."[43] Similar fine blacks were made by burning the pits of the peach, cherry or apricot. The powdered charcoal was then mixed with gum arabic or the yellow of an egg to make a paint.

Different civilizations burned different plants to produce their charcoal pigments. The Inuit of Alaska used wood charcoal mixed with the blood of seals to paint masks and wooden objects. The Polynesians burned coconuts to produce their pigment.

  • Lamp black was used as a pigment for painting and frescoes. as a dye for fabrics, and in some societies for making tattoos. The 15th century Florentine painter Cennino Cennini described how it was made during the Renaissance: "... take a lamp full of linseed oil and fill the lamp with the oil and light the lamp. Then place it, lit, under a thoroughly clean pan and make sure that the flame from the lamp is two or three fingers from the bottom of the pan. The smoke that comes off the flame will hit the bottom of the pan and gather, becoming thick. Wait a bit. take the pan and brush this pigment (that is, this smoke) onto paper or into a pot with something. And it is not necessary to mull or grind it because it is a very fine pigment. Re-fill the lamp with the oil and put it under the pan like this several times and, in this way, make as much of it as is necessary."[43] This same pigment was used by Indian artists to paint the Ajanta Caves, and as dye in ancient Japan.[42]
  • Ivory black, also known as bone char, was originally produced by burning ivory and mixing the resulting charcoal powder with oil. The color is still made today, but ordinary animal bones are substituted for ivory.
  • Mars black is a black pigment made of synthetic iron oxides. It is commonly used in water-colors and oil painting. It takes its name from Mars, the god of war and patron of iron.

Dyes

Good-quality black dyes were not known until the middle of the 14th century. The most common early dyes were made from bark, roots or fruits of different trees; usually walnuts, chestnuts, or certain oak trees. The blacks produced were often more gray, brown or bluish. The cloth had to be dyed several times to darken the color. One solution used by dyers was add to the dye some iron filings, rich in iron oxide, which gave a deeper black. Another was to first dye the fabric dark blue, and then to dye it black.

A much richer and deeper black dye was eventually found made from the oak apple or "gall-nut". The gall-nut is a small round tumor which grows on oak and other varieties of trees. They range in size from 2–5 cm, and are caused by chemicals injected by the larva of certain kinds of gall wasp in the family Cynipidae.[44] The dye was very expensive; a great quantity of gall-nuts were needed for a very small amount of dye. The gall-nuts which made the best dye came from Poland, eastern Europe, the near east and North Africa. Beginning in about the 14th century, dye from gall-nuts was used for clothes of the kings and princes of Europe.[45]

Another important source of natural black dyes from the 17th century onwards was the logwood tree, or Haematoxylum campechianum, which also produced reddish and bluish dyes. It is a species of flowering tree in the legume family, Fabaceae, that is native to southern Mexico and northern Central America.[46] The modern nation of Belize grew from 17th century English logwood logging camps.

Since the mid-19th century, synthetic black dyes have largely replaced natural dyes. One of the important synthetic blacks is Nigrosin, a mixture of synthetic black dyes (CI 50415, Solvent black 5) made by heating a mixture of nitrobenzene, aniline and aniline hydrochloride in the presence of a copper or iron catalyst. Its main industrial uses are as a colorant for lacquers and varnishes and in marker-pen inks.[47]

Inks

The first known inks were made by the Chinese, and date back to the 23rd century B.C. They used natural plant dyes and minerals such as graphite ground with water and applied with an ink brush. Early Chinese inks similar to the modern inkstick have been found dating to about 256 BC at the end of the Warring States period. They were produced from soot, usually produced by burning pine wood, mixed with animal glue. To make ink from an inkstick, the stick is continuously ground against an inkstone with a small quantity of water to produce a dark liquid which is then applied with an ink brush. Artists and calligraphists could vary the thickness of the resulting ink by reducing or increasing the intensity and time of ink grinding. These inks produced the delicate shading and subtle or dramatic effects of Chinese brush painting.[48]

India ink (or "Indian ink" in British English) is a black ink once widely used for writing and printing and now more commonly used for drawing, especially when inking comic books and comic strips. The technique of making it probably came from China. India ink has been in use in India since at least the 4th century BC, where it was called masi. In India, the black color of the ink came from bone char, tar, pitch and other substances.[49][50]

The ancient Romans had a black writing ink they called atramentum librarium.[51] Its name came from the Latin word atrare, which meant to make something black. (This was the same root as the English word atrocious.) It was usually made, like India ink, from soot, although one variety, called atramentum elephantinum, was made by burning the ivory of elephants.[52]

Gall-nuts were also used for making fine black writing ink. Iron gall ink (also known as iron gall nut ink or oak gall ink) was a purple-black or brown-black ink made from iron salts and tannic acids from gall nut. It was the standard writing and drawing ink in Europe, from about the 12th century to the 19th century, and remained in use well into the 20th century.

Astronomy

  • A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravity prevents anything, including light, from escaping.[53] The theory of general relativity predicts that a sufficiently compact mass will deform spacetime to form a black hole. Around a black hole there is a mathematically defined boundary called an event horizon that marks the point of no return. It is called "black" because it absorbs all the light that hits the horizon, reflecting nothing, just like a perfect black body in thermodynamics.[54][55] Black holes of stellar mass are expected to form when very massive stars collapse at the end of their life cycle. After a black hole has formed it can continue to grow by absorbing mass from its surroundings. By absorbing other stars and merging with other black holes, supermassive black holes of millions of solar masses may form. There is general consensus that supermassive black holes exist in the centers of most galaxies. Although a black hole itself is black, infalling material forms an accretion disk, one of the brightest types of object in the universe.
  • Black-body radiation refers to the radiation coming from a body at a given temperature where all incoming energy (light) is converted to heat.
  • Black sky refers to the appearance of space as one emerges from Earth's atmosphere.

Why the night sky and space are black – Olbers' paradox

The fact that outer space is black is sometimes called Olbers' paradox. In theory, because the universe is full of stars, and is believed to be infinitely large, it would be expected that the light of an infinite number of stars would be enough to brilliantly light the whole universe all the time. However, the background color of outer space is black. This contradiction was first noted in 1823 by German astronomer Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers, who posed the question of why the night sky was black.

The current accepted answer is that, although the universe may be infinitely large, it is not infinitely old. It is thought to be about 13.8 billion years old, so we can only see objects as far away as the distance light can travel in 13.8 billion years. Light from stars farther away has not reached Earth, and cannot contribute to making the sky bright. Furthermore, as the universe is expanding, many stars are moving away from Earth. As they move, the wavelength of their light becomes longer, through the Doppler effect, and shifts toward red, or even becomes invisible. As a result of these two phenomena, there is not enough starlight to make space anything but black.[56]

The daytime sky on Earth is blue because light from the Sun strikes molecules in Earth's atmosphere scattering light in all directions. Blue light is scattered more than other colors, and reaches the eye in greater quantities, making the daytime sky appear blue. This is known as Rayleigh scattering.

The nighttime sky on Earth is black because the part of Earth experiencing night is facing away from the Sun, the light of the Sun is blocked by Earth itself, and there is no other bright nighttime source of light in the vicinity. Thus, there is not enough light to undergo Rayleigh scattering and make the sky blue. On the Moon, on the other hand, because there is virtually no atmosphere to scatter the light, the sky is black both day and night. This also holds true for other locations without an atmosphere, such as Mercury.

Biology

Culture

In China, the color black is associated with water, one of the five fundamental elements believed to compose all things; and with winter, cold, and the direction north, usually symbolized by a black tortoise. It is also associated with disorder, including the positive disorder which leads to change and new life. When the first Emperor of China Qin Shi Huang seized power from the Zhou Dynasty, he changed the Imperial color from red to black, saying that black extinguished red. Only when the Han Dynasty appeared in 206 BC was red restored as the imperial color.[58]

 
Japanese men traditionally wear a black kimono with some white decoration on their wedding day

In Japan, black is associated with mystery, the night, the unknown, the supernatural, the invisible and death. Combined with white, it can symbolize intuition.[59] In 10th and 11th century Japan, it was believed that wearing black could bring misfortune. It was worn at court by those who wanted to set themselves apart from the established powers or who had renounced material possessions.[60]

In Japan black can also symbolize experience, as opposed to white, which symbolizes naiveté. The black belt in martial arts symbolizes experience, while a white belt is worn by novices.[61] Japanese men traditionally wear a black kimono with some white decoration on their wedding day.

In Indonesia black is associated with depth, the subterranean world, demons, disaster, and the left hand. When black is combined with white, however, it symbolizes harmony and equilibrium.[62]

Political movements

Anarchism is a political philosophy, most popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, which holds that governments and capitalism are harmful and undesirable. The symbols of anarchism was usually either a black flag or a black letter A. More recently it is usually represented with a bisected red and black flag, to emphasise the movement's socialist roots in the First International. Anarchism was most popular in Spain, France, Italy, Ukraine and Argentina. There were also small but influential movements in the United States and Russia. In the latter, the movement initially allied itself with the Bolsheviks.[63]

The Black Army[citation needed] was a collection of anarchist military units which fought in the Russian Civil War, sometimes on the side of the Bolshevik Red Army, and sometimes for the opposing White Army. It was officially known as the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine, and it was under the command of the anarchist Nestor Makhno.

Fascism. The Blackshirts (Italian: camicie nere, 'CCNN) were Fascist paramilitary groups in Italy during the period immediately following World War I and until the end of World War II. The Blackshirts were officially known as the Voluntary Militia for National Security (Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale, or MVSN).

Inspired by the black uniforms of the Arditi, Italy's elite storm troops of World War I, the Fascist Blackshirts were organized by Benito Mussolini as the military tool of his political movement.[64] They used violence and intimidation against Mussolini's opponents. The emblem of the Italian fascists was a black flag with fasces, an axe in a bundle of sticks, an ancient Roman symbol of authority. Mussolini came to power in 1922 through his March on Rome with the blackshirts.

Black was also adopted by Adolf Hitler and the Nazis in Germany. Red, white and black were the colors of the flag of the German Empire from 1870 to 1918. In Mein Kampf, Hitler explained that they were "revered colors expressive of our homage to the glorious past." Hitler also wrote that "the new flag ... should prove effective as a large poster" because "in hundreds of thousands of cases a really striking emblem may be the first cause of awakening interest in a movement." The black swastika was meant to symbolize the Aryan race, which, according to the Nazis, "was always anti-Semitic and will always be anti-Semitic."[65] Several designs by a number of different authors were considered, but the one adopted in the end was Hitler's personal design.[66] Black became the color of the uniform of the SS, the Schutzstaffel or "defense corps", the paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party, and was worn by SS officers from 1932 until the end of World War II.

The Nazis used a black triangle to symbolize anti-social elements. The symbol originates from Nazi concentration camps, where every prisoner had to wear one of the Nazi concentration camp badges on their jacket, the color of which categorized them according to "their kind". Many Black Triangle prisoners were either mentally disabled or mentally ill. The homeless were also included, as were alcoholics, the Romani people, the habitually "work-shy", prostitutes, draft dodgers and pacifists.[67] More recently the black triangle has been adopted as a symbol in lesbian culture and by disabled activists.

Black shirts were also worn by the British Union of Fascists before World War II, and members of fascist movements in the Netherlands.[68]

Patriotic resistance. The Lützow Free Corps, composed of volunteer German students and academics fighting against Napoleon in 1813, could not afford to make special uniforms and therefore adopted black, as the only color that could be used to dye their civilian clothing without the original color showing. In 1815 the students began to carry a red, black and gold flag, which they believed (incorrectly) had been the colors of the Holy Roman Empire (the imperial flag had actually been gold and black). In 1848, this banner became the flag of the German confederation. In 1866, Prussia unified Germany under its rule, and imposed the red, white and black of its own flag, which remained the colors of the German flag until the end of the Second World War. In 1949 the Federal Republic of Germany returned to the original flag and colors of the students and professors of 1815, which is the flag of Germany today.[69]

Military

 
Hussar from Husaren-Regiment Nr.5 (von Ruesch) in 1744 with the Totenkopf on the mirliton (ger. Flügelmütze).

Black has been a traditional color of cavalry and armoured or mechanized troops. German armoured troops (Panzerwaffe) traditionally wore black uniforms, and even in others, a black beret is common. In Finland, black is the symbolic color for both armoured troops and combat engineers, and military units of these specialities have black flags and unit insignia.

The black beret and the color black is also a symbol of special forces in many countries. Soviet and Russian OMON special police and Russian naval infantry wear a black beret. A black beret is also worn by military police in the Canadian, Czech, Croatian, Portuguese, Spanish and Serbian armies.

The silver-on-black skull and crossbones symbol or Totenkopf and a black uniform were used by Hussars and Black Brunswickers, the German Panzerwaffe and the Nazi Schutzstaffel, and U.S. 400th Missile Squadron (crossed missiles), and continues in use with the Estonian Kuperjanov Battalion.

Religion

In Christian theology, black was the color of the universe before God created light. In many religious cultures, from Mesoamerica to Oceania to India and Japan, the world was created out of a primordial darkness.[70] In the Bible the light of faith and Christianity is often contrasted with the darkness of ignorance and paganism.

 
Modern-day monks of the Order of Saint Benedict in New Jersey

In Christianity, the devil is often called the "prince of darkness". The term was used in John Milton's poem Paradise Lost, published in 1667, referring to Satan, who is viewed as the embodiment of evil. It is an English translation of the Latin phrase princeps tenebrarum, which occurs in the Acts of Pilate, written in the fourth century, in the 11th-century hymn Rhythmus de die mortis by Pietro Damiani,[71] and in a sermon by Bernard of Clairvaux[72] from the 12th century. The phrase also occurs in King Lear by William Shakespeare (c. 1606), Act III, Scene IV, l. 14: 'The prince of darkness is a gentleman."

Priests and pastors of the Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and Protestant churches commonly wear black, as do monks of the Benedictine Order, who consider it the color of humility and penitence.

  • In Islam, black, along with green, plays an important symbolic role. It is the color of the Black Standard, the banner that is said to have been carried by the soldiers of Muhammad. It is also used as a symbol in Shi'a Islam (heralding the advent of the Mahdi), and the flag of followers of Islamism and Jihadism.
  • In Hinduism, the goddess Kali, goddess of time and change, is portrayed with black or dark blue skin. wearing a necklace adorned with severed heads and hands. Her name means "The black one". She destroys anger and passion according to Hindu mythology and her devotees are supposed to abstain from meat or intoxication.[73][74][75] Kali does not eat meat, but it is the śāstra's injunction that those who are unable to give up meat-eating, they may sacrifice one goat, not cow, one small animal before the goddess Kali, on amāvāsya (new moon) day, night, not day, and they can eat it.
  • In Paganism, black represents dignity, force, stability, and protection. The color is often used to banish and release negative energies,[76] or binding. An athame is a ceremonial blade often having a black handle, which is used in some forms of witchcraft.[77]

Sports

  • The national rugby union team of New Zealand is called the All Blacks, in reference to their black outfits, and the color is also shared by other New Zealand national teams such as the Black Caps (cricket) and the Kiwis (rugby league).
  • Association football (soccer) referees traditionally wear all-black uniforms, however nowadays other uniform colors may also be worn.
  • In auto racing, a black flag signals a driver to go into the pits.
  • In baseball, "the black" refers to the batter's eye, a blacked out area around the center-field bleachers, painted black to give hitters a decent background for pitched balls.
  • A large number of teams have uniforms designed with black colors even when the team does not normally feature that color. Many feel the color sometimes imparts a psychological advantage in its wearers. Black is used by numerous professional and collegiate sports teams

Idioms and expressions

 
Namesake of the idiom "black sheep"
  • In general, the Negro race of African origin is called "Black", while the Caucasian race of European origin is called "White".
  • In the United States, "Black Friday" (the day after Thanksgiving Day, the fourth Thursday in November) is traditionally the busiest shopping day of the year. Many Americans are on holiday because of Thanksgiving, and many retailers open earlier and close later than normal, and offer special prices. The day's name originated in Philadelphia sometime before 1961, and originally was used to describe the heavy and disruptive downtown pedestrian and vehicle traffic which would occur on that day.[78][79] Later an alternative explanation began to be offered: that "Black Friday" indicates the point in the year that retailers begin to turn a profit, or are "in the black", because of the large volume of sales on that day.[78][80]
  • "In the black" means profitable. Accountants originally used black ink in ledgers to indicate profit, and red ink to indicate a loss.
  • Black Friday also refers to any particularly disastrous day on financial markets. The first Black Friday (1869), September 24, 1869, was caused by the efforts of two speculators, Jay Gould and James Fisk, to corner the gold market on the New York Gold Exchange.
  • A blacklist is a list of undesirable persons or entities (to be placed on the list is to be "blacklisted").
  • Black comedy is a form of comedy dealing with morbid and serious topics. The expression is similar to black humor or black humour.
  • A black mark against a person relates to something bad they have done.
  • A black mood is a bad one (cf Winston Churchill's clinical depression, which he called "my black dog").[81]
  • Black market is used to denote the trade of illegal goods, or alternatively the illegal trade of otherwise legal items at considerably higher prices, e.g. to evade rationing.
  • Black propaganda is the use of known falsehoods, partial truths, or masquerades in propaganda to confuse an opponent.
  • Blackmail is the act of threatening someone to do something that would hurt them in some way, such as by revealing sensitive information about them, in order to force the threatened party to fulfill certain demands. Ordinarily, such a threat is illegal.
  • If the black eight-ball, in billiards, is sunk before all others are out of play, the player loses.
  • The black sheep of the family is the ne'er-do-well.
  • To blackball someone is to block their entry into a club or some such institution. In the traditional English gentlemen's club, members vote on the admission of a candidate by secretly placing a white or black ball in a hat. If upon the completion of voting, there was even one black ball amongst the white, the candidate would be denied membership, and he would never know who had "blackballed" him.
  • Black tea in the Western culture is known as "crimson tea" in Chinese and culturally influenced languages (紅 茶, Mandarin Chinese hóngchá; Japanese kōcha; Korean hongcha).
  • "The black" is a wildfire suppression term referring to a burned area on a wildfire capable of acting as a safety zone.
  • Black coffee refers to coffee without sugar or cream.

Associations and symbolism

Mourning

In the West, black is commonly associated with mourning and bereavement,[82][5] and usually worn at funerals and memorial services. In some traditional societies, for example in Greece and Italy, some widows wear black for the rest of their lives. In contrast, across much of Africa and parts of Asia like Vietnam, white is a color of mourning.

In Victorian England, the colors and fabrics of mourning were specified in an unofficial dress code: "non-reflective black paramatta and crape for the first year of deepest mourning, followed by nine months of dullish black silk, heavily trimmed with crape, and then three months when crape was discarded. Paramatta was a fabric of combined silk and wool or cotton; crape was a harsh black silk fabric with a crimped appearance produced by heat. Widows were allowed to change into the colors of half-mourning, such as gray and lavender, black and white, for the final six months."[83]

A "black day" (or week or month) usually refers to tragic date. The Romans marked fasti days with white stones and nefasti days with black. The term is often used to remember massacres. Black months include the Black September in Jordan, when large numbers of Palestinians were killed, and Black July in Sri Lanka, the killing of members of the Tamil population by the Sinhalese government.

In the financial world, the term often refers to a dramatic drop in the stock market. For example, the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the stock market crash on October 29, 1929, which marked the start of the Great Depression, is nicknamed Black Tuesday, and was preceded by Black Thursday, a downturn on October 24 the previous week.

Darkness and evil

In western popular culture, black has long been associated with evil and darkness. It is the traditional color of witchcraft and black magic.[5]

In the Book of Revelation, the last book in the New Testament of the Bible, the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are supposed to announce the Apocalypse before the Last Judgment. The horseman representing famine rides a black horse.[84] The vampire of literature and films, such as Count Dracula of the Bram Stoker novel, dressed in black, and could only move at night. The Wicked Witch of the West in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz became the archetype of witches for generations of children. Whereas witches and sorcerers inspired real fear in the 17th century, in the 21st century children and adults dressed as witches for Halloween parties and parades.

Power, authority and solemnity

Black is frequently used as a color of power, law and authority. In many countries judges and magistrates wear black robes. That custom began in Europe in the 13th and 14th centuries. Jurists, magistrates and certain other court officials in France began to wear long black robes during the reign of Philip IV of France (1285–1314), and in England from the time of Edward I (1271–1307). The custom spread to the cities of Italy at about the same time, between 1300 and 1320. The robes of judges resembled those worn by the clergy, and represented the law and authority of the King, while those of the clergy represented the law of God and authority of the church.[85]

Until the 20th century most police uniforms were black, until they were largely replaced by a less menacing blue in France, the U.S. and other countries. In the United States, police cars are frequently Black and white. The riot control units of the Basque Autonomous Police in Spain are known as beltzak ("blacks") after their uniform.

Black today is the most common color for limousines and the official cars of government officials.

Black formal attire is still worn at many solemn occasions or ceremonies, from graduations to formal balls. Graduation gowns are copied from the gowns worn by university professors in the Middle Ages, which in turn were copied from the robes worn by judges and priests, who often taught at the early universities. The mortarboard hat worn by graduates is adapted from a square cap called a biretta worn by Medieval professors and clerics.

Functionality

In the 19th and 20th centuries, many machines and devices, large and small, were painted black, to stress their functionality. These included telephones, sewing machines, steamships, railroad locomotives, and automobiles. The Ford Model T, the first mass-produced car, was available only in black from 1914 to 1926. Of means of transportation, only airplanes were rarely ever painted black.[86]

Black house paint is becoming more popular with Sherwin-Williams reporting that the color, Tricorn Black, was the 6th most popular exterior house paint color in Canada and the 12th most popular paint in the United States in 2018.[87]

Ethnography

  • The term "black" is often used in the West to describe people whose skin is darker. In the United States, it is particularly used to describe African Americans. The terms for African Americans have changed over the years, as shown by the categories in the United States Census, taken every ten years.
  • In the first U.S. Census, taken in 1790, just four categories were used: Free White males, Free White females, other free persons, and slaves.
  • In the 1820 census the new category "colored" was added.
  • In the 1850 census, slaves were listed by owner, and a B indicated black, while an M indicated "mulatto".
  • In the 1890 census, the categories for race were white, black, mulatto, quadroon (a person one-quarter black); octoroon (a person one-eighth black), Chinese, Japanese, or American Indian.
  • In the 1930 census, anyone with any black blood was supposed to be listed as "Negro".
  • In the 1970 census, the category "Negro or black" was used for the first time.
  • In the 2000 and 2012 census, the category "Black or African-American" was used, defined as "a person having their origin in any of the racial groups in Africa." In the 2012 Census 12.1 percent of Americans identified themselves as Black or African-American.[88]

Black is also commonly used as a racial description in the United Kingdom, since ethnicity was first measured in the 2001 census. The 2011 British census asked residents to describe themselves, and categories offered included Black, African, Caribbean, or Black British. Other possible categories were African British, African Scottish, Caribbean British and Caribbean Scottish. Of the total UK population in 2001, 1.0 percent identified themselves as Black Caribbean, 0.8 percent as Black African, and 0.2 percent as Black (others).[89]

In Canada, census respondents can identify themselves as Black. In the 2006 census, 2.5 percent of the population identified themselves as black.[90]

In Australia, the term black is not used in the census. In the 2006 census, 2.3 percent of Australians identified themselves as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islanders.

In Brazil, the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) asks people to identify themselves as branco (white), pardo (brown), preto (black), or amarelo (yellow). In 2008 6.8 percent of the population identified themselves as "preto".[91]

Opposite of white

  • Black and white have often been used to describe opposites; particularly light and darkness and good and evil. In Medieval literature, the white knight usually represented virtue, the black knight something mysterious and sinister. In American westerns, the hero often wore a white hat, the villain a black hat.
  • In the original game of chess invented in Persia or India, the colors of the two sides were varied; a 12th-century Iranian chess set in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, has red and green pieces. But when the game was imported into Europe, the colors, corresponding to European culture, usually became black and white.
  • Studies have shown that something printed in black letters on white has more authority with readers than any other color of printing.
  • In philosophy and arguments, the issue is often described as black-and-white, meaning that the issue at hand is dichotomized (having two clear, opposing sides with no middle ground).

Conspiracy

Black is commonly associated with secrecy.

  • The Black Chamber was a term given to an office which secretly opened and read diplomatic mail and broke codes. Queen Elizabeth I had such an office, headed by her Secretary, Sir Francis Walsingham, which successfully broke the Spanish codes and broke up several plots against the Queen. In France a cabinet noir was established inside the French post office by Louis XIII to open diplomatic mail. It was closed during the French Revolution but re-opened under Napoleon I. The Habsburg Empire and Dutch Republic had similar black chambers.
  • The United States created a secret peacetime Black Chamber, called the Cipher Bureau, in 1919. It was funded by the State Department and Army and disguised as a commercial company in New York. It successfully broke a number of diplomatic codes, including the code of the Japanese government. It was closed down in 1929 after the State Department withdrew funding, when the new Secretary of State, Henry Stimson, stated that "Gentlemen do not read each other's mail." The Cipher Bureau was the ancestor of the U.S. National Security Agency.[92]
  • A black project is a secret military project, such as Enigma Decryption during World War II, or a secret counter-narcotics or police sting operation.
  • Black ops are covert operations carried out by a government, government agency or military.
  • A black budget is a government budget that is allocated for classified or other secret operations of a nation. The black budget is an account expenses and spending related to military research and covert operations. The black budget is mostly classified due to security reasons.

Elegant fashion

Black is the color most commonly associated with elegance in Europe and the United States, followed by silver, gold, and white.[93]

Black first became a fashionable color for men in Europe in the 17th century, in the courts of Italy and Spain. (See history above.) In the 19th century, it was the fashion for men both in business and for evening wear, in the form of a black coat whose tails came down the knees. In the evening it was the custom of the men to leave the women after dinner to go to a special smoking room to enjoy cigars or cigarettes. This meant that their tailcoats eventually smelled of tobacco. According to the legend, in 1865 Edward VII, then the Prince of Wales, had his tailor make a special short smoking jacket. The smoking jacket then evolved into the dinner jacket. Again according to legend, the first Americans to wear the jacket were members of the Tuxedo Club in New York State. Thereafter the jacket became known as a tuxedo in the U.S. The term "smoking" is still used today in Russia and other countries.[94] The tuxedo was always black until the 1930s, when the Duke of Windsor began to wear a tuxedo that was a very dark midnight blue. He did so because a black tuxedo looked greenish in artificial light, while a dark blue tuxedo looked blacker than black itself.[93]

For women's fashion, the defining moment was the invention of the simple black dress by Coco Chanel in 1926. (See history.) Thereafter, a long black gown was used for formal occasions, while the simple black dress could be used for everything else. The designer Karl Lagerfeld, explaining why black was so popular, said: "Black is the color that goes with everything. If you're wearing black, you're on sure ground."[93] Skirts have gone up and down and fashions have changed, but the black dress has not lost its position as the essential element of a woman's wardrobe. The fashion designer Christian Dior said, "elegance is a combination of distinction, naturalness, care and simplicity,"[93] and black exemplified elegance.

The expression "X is the new black" is a reference to the latest trend or fad that is considered a wardrobe basic for the duration of the trend, on the basis that black is always fashionable. The phrase has taken on a life of its own and has become a cliché.

Many performers of both popular and European classical music, including French singers Edith Piaf and Juliette Gréco, and violinist Joshua Bell have traditionally worn black on stage during performances. A black costume was usually chosen as part of their image or stage persona, or because it did not distract from the music, or sometimes for a political reason. Country-western singer Johnny Cash always wore black on stage. In 1971, Cash wrote the song "Man in Black" to explain why he dressed in that color: "We're doing mighty fine I do suppose / In our streak of lightning cars and fancy clothes / But just so we're reminded of the ones who are held back / Up front there ought to be a man in black."

See also

References

Notes and citations

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Bibliography

  • Pastoureau, Michael (2008). Black: The History of a Color. Princeton University Press. p. 216. ISBN 978-0691139302.
  • Heller, Eva (2009). Psychologie de la couleur – Effets et symboliques. Pyramyd (French translation). ISBN 978-2-35017-156-2.
  • Zuffi, Stefano (2012). Color in Art. Abrams. ISBN 978-1-4197-0111-5.
  • Gage, John (2009). La Couleur dans l'art. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-2-87811-325-9.
  • Flam, Jack (1995). Matisse on Art. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-20037-3.
  • Cranshaw, Whitney (2004). Garden Insects of North America. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-09560-4.
  • Gottsegen, Mark (2006). The Painter's Handbook: A Complete Reference. New York: Watson-Guptill Publications. ISBN 0-8230-3496-8.
  • Varichon, Anne (2000). Couleurs – pigments et teintures dans les mains des peuples. Paris: Editions du Seuil. ISBN 978-2-02-084697-4.
  • Jalland, Patricia (2000). Death in the Victorian Family. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198208327.
  • Broecke, Lara (2015). Cennino Cennini's Il Libro dell'Arte: a New English Translation and Commentary with Italian Transcription. Archetype. ISBN 978-1-909492-28-8.
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black, this, article, about, color, other, uses, disambiguation, color, which, results, from, absence, complete, absorption, visible, light, achromatic, color, without, like, white, grey, often, used, symbolically, figuratively, represent, darkness, white, hav. This article is about the color For other uses see Black disambiguation Black is a color which results from the absence or complete absorption of visible light It is an achromatic color without hue like white and grey 1 It is often used symbolically or figuratively to represent darkness 2 Black and white have often been used to describe opposites such as good and evil the Dark Ages versus Age of Enlightenment and night versus day Since the Middle Ages black has been the symbolic color of solemnity and authority and for this reason it is still commonly worn by judges and magistrates 2 Black Clockwise from top left Anubis statue American black bear Galaxy NGC 406 The Supreme Court of the United States Portait painting of Queen Victoria Color coordinatesHex triplet 000000sRGBB r g b 0 0 0 CMYKH c m y k 0 0 0 100 HSV h s v 0 0 0 CIELChuv L C h 0 0 0 SourceBy definitionB Normalized to 0 255 byte H Normalized to 0 100 hundred Black was one of the first colors used by artists in Neolithic cave paintings 3 It was used in ancient Egypt and Greece as the color of the underworld 4 In the Roman Empire it became the color of mourning and over the centuries it was frequently associated with death evil witches and magic 5 In the 14th century it was worn by royalty clergy judges and government officials in much of Europe It became the color worn by English romantic poets businessmen and statesmen in the 19th century and a high fashion color in the 20th century 2 According to surveys in Europe and North America it is the color most commonly associated with mourning the end secrets magic force violence fear evil and elegance 6 Black is the most common ink color used for printing books newspapers and documents as it provides the highest contrast with white paper and thus is the easiest color to read Similarly black text on a white screen is the most common format used on computer screens 7 As of September 2019 the darkest material is made by MIT engineers from vertically aligned carbon nanotubes 8 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Art 2 1 Prehistoric 2 2 Ancient 2 3 Postclassical 2 3 1 12th and 13th centuries 2 3 2 14th and 15th centuries 2 4 Modern 2 4 1 16th and 17th centuries 2 4 2 18th and 19th centuries 2 4 3 20th and 21st centuries 3 Science 3 1 Physics 3 2 Chemistry 3 2 1 Pigments 3 2 2 Dyes 3 2 3 Inks 3 3 Astronomy 3 3 1 Why the night sky and space are black Olbers paradox 3 4 Biology 4 Culture 4 1 Political movements 4 2 Military 4 3 Religion 4 4 Sports 4 5 Idioms and expressions 5 Associations and symbolism 5 1 Mourning 5 2 Darkness and evil 5 3 Power authority and solemnity 5 4 Functionality 5 5 Ethnography 5 6 Opposite of white 5 7 Conspiracy 5 8 Elegant fashion 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes and citations 7 2 BibliographyEtymologyThe word black comes from Old English blaec black dark also ink from Proto Germanic blakkaz burned from Proto Indo European bhleg to burn gleam shine flash from base bhel to shine related to Old Saxon blak ink Old High German blach black Old Norse blakkr dark Dutch blaken to burn and Swedish black ink More distant cognates include Latin flagrare to blaze glow burn and Ancient Greek phlegein to burn scorch The Ancient Greeks sometimes used the same word to name different colors if they had the same intensity Kuanos could mean both dark blue and black 9 The Ancient Romans had two words for black ater was a flat dull black while niger was a brilliant saturated black Ater has vanished from the vocabulary but niger was the source of the country name Nigeria 10 the English word Negro and the word for black in most modern Romance languages French noir Spanish and Portuguese negro Italian nero Romanian negru Old High German also had two words for black swartz for dull black and blach for a luminous black These are parallelled in Middle English by the terms swart for dull black and blaek for luminous black Swart still survives as the word swarthy while blaek became the modern English black 9 The former is cognate with the words used for black in most modern Germanic languages aside from English German schwarz Dutch zwart Swedish svart Danish sort Icelandic svartr 11 In heraldry the word used for the black color is sable 12 named for the black fur of the sable an animal ArtPrehistoric Megaloceros cave art at Lascaux Black was one of the first colors used in art The Lascaux Cave in France contains drawings of bulls and other animals drawn by paleolithic artists between 18 000 and 17 000 years ago They began by using charcoal and later achieved darker pigments by burning bones or grinding a powder of manganese oxide 9 Ancient For the ancient Egyptians black had positive associations being the color of fertility and the rich black soil flooded by the Nile It was the color of Anubis the god of the underworld who took the form of a black jackal and offered protection against evil to the dead To ancient Greeks black represented the underworld separated from the living by the river Acheron whose water ran black Those who had committed the worst sins were sent to Tartarus the deepest and darkest level In the center was the palace of Hades the king of the underworld where he was seated upon a black ebony throne Black was one of the most important colors used by ancient Greek artists In the 6th century BC they began making black figure pottery and later red figure pottery using a highly original technique In black figure pottery the artist would paint figures with a glossy clay slip on a red clay pot When the pot was fired the figures painted with the slip would turn black against a red background Later they reversed the process painting the spaces between the figures with slip This created magnificent red figures against a glossy black background 13 In the social hierarchy of ancient Rome purple was the color reserved for the Emperor red was the color worn by soldiers red cloaks for the officers red tunics for the soldiers white the color worn by the priests and black was worn by craftsmen and artisans The black they wore was not deep and rich the vegetable dyes used to make black were not solid or lasting so the blacks often faded to gray or brown 14 In Latin the word for black ater and to darken atere were associated with cruelty brutality and evil They were the root of the English words atrocious and atrocity 15 Black was also the Roman color of death and mourning In the 2nd century BC Roman magistrates began to wear a dark toga called a toga pulla to funeral ceremonies Later under the Empire the family of the deceased also wore dark colors for a long period then after a banquet to mark the end of mourning exchanged the black for a white toga In Roman poetry death was called the hora nigra the black hour 9 The German and Scandinavian peoples worshipped their own goddess of the night Nott who crossed the sky in a chariot drawn by a black horse They also feared Hel the goddess of the kingdom of the dead whose skin was black on one side and red on the other They also held sacred the raven They believed that Odin the king of the Nordic pantheon had two black ravens Huginn and Muninn who served as his agents traveling the world for him watching and listening 16 Statue of Anubis guardian of the underworld from the tomb of Tutankhamun Greek black figure pottery Ajax and Achilles playing a game about 540 530 BC Vatican Museums Red figure pottery with black background Portrait of Thetis about 470 480 BC The Louvre Postclassical In the early Middle Ages black was commonly associated with darkness and evil In Medieval paintings the devil was usually depicted as having human form but with wings and black skin or hair 17 12th and 13th centuries In fashion black did not have the prestige of red the color of the nobility It was worn by Benedictine monks as a sign of humility and penitence In the 12th century a famous theological dispute broke out between the Cistercian monks who wore white and the Benedictines who wore black A Benedictine abbot Pierre the Venerable accused the Cistercians of excessive pride in wearing white instead of black Saint Bernard of Clairvaux the founder of the Cistercians responded that black was the color of the devil hell of death and sin while white represented purity innocence and all the virtues 18 Black symbolized both power and secrecy in the medieval world The emblem of the Holy Roman Empire of Germany was a black eagle The black knight in the poetry of the Middle Ages was an enigmatic figure hiding his identity usually wrapped in secrecy 19 Black ink invented in China was traditionally used in the Middle Ages for writing for the simple reason that black was the darkest color and therefore provided the greatest contrast with white paper or parchment making it the easiest color to read It became even more important in the 15th century with the invention of printing A new kind of ink printer s ink was created out of soot turpentine and walnut oil The new ink made it possible to spread ideas to a mass audience through printed books and to popularize art through black and white engravings and prints Because of its contrast and clarity black ink on white paper continued to be the standard for printing books newspapers and documents and for the same reason black text on a white background is the most common format used on computer screens 7 The Italian painter Duccio di Buoninsegna showed Christ expelling the Devil shown covered with bristly black hair 1308 11 The 15th century painting of the Last Judgement by Fra Angelico 1395 1455 depicted hell with a vivid black devil devouring sinners Portrait of a monk of the Benedictine Order 1484 The black knight in a miniature painting of a medieval romance Le Livre du cœur d amour epris about 1460 Gutenberg Bible 1451 1452 Black ink was used for printing books because it provided the greatest contrast with the white paper and was the clearest and easiest color to read 14th and 15th centuries In the early Middle Ages princes nobles and the wealthy usually wore bright colors particularly scarlet cloaks from Italy Black was rarely part of the wardrobe of a noble family The one exception was the fur of the sable This glossy black fur from an animal of the marten family was the finest and most expensive fur in Europe It was imported from Russia and Poland and used to trim the robes and gowns of royalty In the 14th century the status of black began to change First high quality black dyes began to arrive on the market allowing garments of a deep rich black Magistrates and government officials began to wear black robes as a sign of the importance and seriousness of their positions A third reason was the passage of sumptuary laws in some parts of Europe which prohibited the wearing of costly clothes and certain colors by anyone except members of the nobility The famous bright scarlet cloaks from Venice and the peacock blue fabrics from Florence were restricted to the nobility The wealthy bankers and merchants of northern Italy responded by changing to black robes and gowns made with the most expensive fabrics 20 The change to the more austere but elegant black was quickly picked up by the kings and nobility It began in northern Italy where the Duke of Milan and the Count of Savoy and the rulers of Mantua Ferrara Rimini and Urbino began to dress in black It then spread to France led by Louis I Duke of Orleans younger brother of King Charles VI of France It moved to England at the end of the reign of King Richard II 1377 1399 where all the court began to wear black In 1419 20 black became the color of the powerful Duke of Burgundy Philip the Good It moved to Spain where it became the color of the Spanish Habsburgs of Charles V and of his son Philip II of Spain 1527 1598 European rulers saw it as the color of power dignity humility and temperance By the end of the 16th century it was the color worn by almost all the monarchs of Europe and their courts 21 Philip the Good in about 1450 by Rogier van der Weyden Portrait of a Young Woman by Petrus Christus about 1470 Charles V Holy Roman Emperor 1500 1558 by Titian Portrait of Philip II of Spain 1527 1598 Modern 16th and 17th centuries While black was the color worn by the Catholic rulers of Europe it was also the emblematic color of the Protestant Reformation in Europe and the Puritans in England and America John Calvin Philip Melanchthon and other Protestant theologians denounced the richly colored and decorated interiors of Roman Catholic churches They saw the color red worn by the Pope and his Cardinals as the color of luxury sin and human folly 22 In some northern European cities mobs attacked churches and cathedrals smashed the stained glass windows and defaced the statues and decoration In Protestant doctrine clothing was required to be sober simple and discreet Bright colors were banished and replaced by blacks browns and grays women and children were recommended to wear white 23 In the Protestant Netherlands Rembrandt used this sober new palette of blacks and browns to create portraits whose faces emerged from the shadows expressing the deepest human emotions The Catholic painters of the Counter Reformation like Rubens went in the opposite direction they filled their paintings with bright and rich colors The new Baroque churches of the Counter Reformation were usually shining white inside and filled with statues frescoes marble gold and colorful paintings to appeal to the public But European Catholics of all classes like Protestants eventually adopted a sober wardrobe that was mostly black brown and gray 24 Swiss theologian John Calvin denounced the bright colors worn by Roman Catholic priests and colorful decoration of churches Increase Mather an American Puritan clergyman 1688 American Pilgrims in New England going to church painting by George Henry Boughton 1867 Rembrandt Self portrait 1659 John Duke of Braganza later King John IV of Portugal 1628 Black painted suit of German armor crafted circa 1600 As with many outfits black in the piece is used to contrast against lighter colors 25 In the second part of the 17th century Europe and America experienced an epidemic of fear of witchcraft People widely believed that the devil appeared at midnight in a ceremony called a Black Mass or black sabbath usually in the form of a black animal often a goat a dog a wolf a bear a deer or a rooster accompanied by their familiar spirits black cats serpents and other black creatures This was the origin of the widespread superstition about black cats and other black animals In medieval Flanders in a ceremony called Kattenstoet black cats were thrown from the belfry of the Cloth Hall of Ypres to ward off witchcraft 26 Witch trials were common in both Europe and America during this period During the notorious Salem witch trials in New England in 1692 93 one of those on trial was accused of being able turn into a black thing with a blue cap and others of having familiars in the form of a black dog a black cat and a black bird 27 Nineteen women and men were hanged as witches 28 An English manual on witch hunting 1647 showing a witch with her familiar spirits Black cats have been accused for centuries of being the familiar spirits of witches or of bringing bad luck 18th and 19th centuries In the 18th century during the European Age of Enlightenment black receded as a fashion color Paris became the fashion capital and pastels blues greens yellow and white became the colors of the nobility and upper classes But after the French Revolution black again became the dominant color Black was the color of the industrial revolution largely fueled by coal and later by oil Thanks to coal smoke the buildings of the large cities of Europe and America gradually turned black By 1846 the industrial area of the West Midlands of England was commonly called the Black Country 29 Charles Dickens and other writers described the dark streets and smoky skies of London and they were vividly illustrated in the engravings of French artist Gustave Dore A different kind of black was an important part of the romantic movement in literature Black was the color of melancholy the dominant theme of romanticism The novels of the period were filled with castles ruins dungeons storms and meetings at midnight The leading poets of the movement were usually portrayed dressed in black usually with a white shirt and open collar and a scarf carelessly over their shoulder Percy Bysshe Shelley and Lord Byron helped create the enduring stereotype of the romantic poet The invention of inexpensive synthetic black dyes and the industrialization of the textile industry meant that high quality black clothes were available for the first time to the general population In the 19th century black gradually became the most popular color of business dress of the upper and middle classes in England the Continent and America Black dominated literature and fashion in the 19th century and played a large role in painting James McNeill Whistler made the color the subject of his most famous painting Arrangement in grey and black number one 1871 better known as Whistler s Mother 30 Some 19th century French painters had a low opinion of black Reject black Paul Gauguin said and that mix of black and white they call gray Nothing is black nothing is gray 31 But Edouard Manet used blacks for their strength and dramatic effect Manet s portrait of painter Berthe Morisot was a study in black which perfectly captured her spirit of independence The black gave the painting power and immediacy he even changed her eyes which were green to black to strengthen the effect 32 Henri Matisse quoted the French impressionist Pissarro telling him Manet is stronger than us all he made light with black 33 Pierre Auguste Renoir used luminous blacks especially in his portraits When someone told him that black was not a color Renoir replied What makes you think that Black is the queen of colors I always detested Prussian blue I tried to replace black with a mixture of red and blue I tried using cobalt blue or ultramarine but I always came back to ivory black 34 Vincent van Gogh used black lines to outline many of the objects in his paintings such as the bed in the famous painting of his bedroom making them stand apart His painting of black crows over a cornfield painted shortly before he died was particularly agitated and haunting In the late 19th century black also became the color of anarchism See the section political movements Portrait of Empress Teresa Cristina of Brazil circa 1870 Arrangement in Grey and Black Number 1 1871 by James McNeill Whistler better known as Whistler s Mother Berthe Morisot with a Bouquet of Violets by Edouard Manet 1872 Le Bal de l Opera 1873 by Edouard Manet shows the dominance of black in Parisian evening dress The Theater Box 1874 by Pierre Auguste Renoir captured the luminosity of black fabric in the light Wheat Field with Crows 1890 one of the last paintings of Vincent van Gogh captures his agitated state of mind 20th and 21st centuries In the 20th century black was the color of Italian and German fascism See the section political movements In art black regained some of the territory that it had lost during the 19th century The Russian painter Kasimir Malevich a member of the Suprematist movement created the Black Square in 1915 is widely considered the first purely abstract painting 35 He wrote The painted work is no longer simply the imitation of reality but is this very reality It is not a demonstration of ability but the materialization of an idea 36 Black was also appreciated by Henri Matisse When I didn t know what color to put down I put down black he said in 1945 Black is a force I used black as ballast to simplify the construction Since the impressionists it seems to have made continuous progress taking a more and more important part in color orchestration comparable to that of the double bass as a solo instrument 37 In the 1950s black came to be a symbol of individuality and intellectual and social rebellion the color of those who didn t accept established norms and values In Paris it was worn by Left Bank intellectuals and performers such as Juliette Greco and by some members of the Beat Movement in New York and San Francisco 38 Black leather jackets were worn by motorcycle gangs such as the Hells Angels and street gangs on the fringes of society in the United States Black as a color of rebellion was celebrated in such films as The Wild One with Marlon Brando By the end of the 20th century black was the emblematic color of the punk subculture punk fashion and the goth subculture Goth fashion which emerged in England in the 1980s was inspired by Victorian era mourning dress In men s fashion black gradually ceded its dominance to navy blue particularly in business suits Black evening dress and formal dress in general were worn less and less In 1960 John F Kennedy was the last American President to be inaugurated wearing formal dress President Lyndon Johnson and all his successors were inaugurated wearing business suits Women s fashion was revolutionized and simplified in 1926 by the French designer Coco Chanel who published a drawing of a simple black dress in Vogue magazine She famously said A woman needs just three things a black dress a black sweater and on her arm a man she loves 38 French designer Jean Patou also followed suit by creating a black collection in 1929 39 Other designers contributed to the trend of the little black dress The Italian designer Gianni Versace said Black is the quintessence of simplicity and elegance and French designer Yves Saint Laurent said black is the liaison which connects art and fashion 38 One of the most famous black dresses of the century was designed by Hubert de Givenchy and was worn by Audrey Hepburn in the 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany s The American civil rights movement in the 1950s was a struggle for the political equality of African Americans It developed into the Black Power movement in the early 1960s until the late 1980s and the Black Lives Matter movement in the 2010s and 2020s It also popularized the slogan Black is Beautiful The Black Square 1915 by Kazimir Malevich is considered the first purely abstract painting Tretyakov Gallery Moscow The goth fashion model Lady Amaranth Goth fashion was inspired by British Victorian mourning costumes SciencePhysics Main article Absorption electromagnetic radiation In the visible spectrum black is the result of the absorption of all colors Black can be defined as the visual impression experienced when no visible light reaches the eye Pigments or dyes that absorb light rather than reflect it back to the eye look black A black pigment can however result from a combination of several pigments that collectively absorb all colors If appropriate proportions of three primary pigments are mixed the result reflects so little light as to be called black This provides two superficially opposite but actually complementary descriptions of black Black is the absorption of all colors of light or an exhaustive combination of multiple colors of pigment Vantablack was the blackest substance known until 2019 40 8 In physics a black body is a perfect absorber of light but by a thermodynamic rule it is also the best emitter Thus the best radiative cooling out of sunlight is by using black paint though it is important that it be black a nearly perfect absorber in the infrared as well In elementary science far ultraviolet light is called black light because while itself unseen it causes many minerals and other substances to fluoresce Absorption of light is contrasted by transmission reflection and diffusion where the light is only redirected causing objects to appear transparent reflective or white respectively A material is said to be black if most incoming light is absorbed equally in the material Light electromagnetic radiation in the visible spectrum interacts with the atoms and molecules which causes the energy of the light to be converted into other forms of energy usually heat This means that black surfaces can act as thermal collectors absorbing light and generating heat see Solar thermal collector As of September 2019 the darkest material is made from vertically aligned carbon nanotubes The material was grown by MIT engineers and was reported to have a 99 995 absorption rate of any incoming light 8 This surpasses any former darkest materials including Vantablack which has a peak absorption rate of 99 965 in the visible spectrum 41 Chemistry Pigments The earliest pigments used by Neolithic man were charcoal red ocher and yellow ocher The black lines of cave art were drawn with the tips of burnt torches made of a wood with resin 42 Different charcoal pigments were made by burning different woods and animal products each of which produced a different tone The charcoal would be ground and then mixed with animal fat to make the pigment Vine black was produced in Roman times by burning the cut branches of grapevines It could also be produced by burning the remains of the crushed grapes which were collected and dried in an oven According to the historian Vitruvius the deepness and richness of the black produced corresponded to the quality of the wine The finest wines produced a black with a bluish tinge the color of indigo The 15th century painter Cennino Cennini described how this pigment was made during the Renaissance in his famous handbook for artists there is a black which is made from the tendrils of vines And these tendrils need to be burned And when they have been burned throw some water onto them and put them out and then mull them in the same way as the other black And this is a lean and black pigment and is one of the perfect pigments that we use 43 Cennini also noted that There is another black which is made from burnt almond shells or peaches and this is a perfect fine black 43 Similar fine blacks were made by burning the pits of the peach cherry or apricot The powdered charcoal was then mixed with gum arabic or the yellow of an egg to make a paint Different civilizations burned different plants to produce their charcoal pigments The Inuit of Alaska used wood charcoal mixed with the blood of seals to paint masks and wooden objects The Polynesians burned coconuts to produce their pigment Lamp black was used as a pigment for painting and frescoes as a dye for fabrics and in some societies for making tattoos The 15th century Florentine painter Cennino Cennini described how it was made during the Renaissance take a lamp full of linseed oil and fill the lamp with the oil and light the lamp Then place it lit under a thoroughly clean pan and make sure that the flame from the lamp is two or three fingers from the bottom of the pan The smoke that comes off the flame will hit the bottom of the pan and gather becoming thick Wait a bit take the pan and brush this pigment that is this smoke onto paper or into a pot with something And it is not necessary to mull or grind it because it is a very fine pigment Re fill the lamp with the oil and put it under the pan like this several times and in this way make as much of it as is necessary 43 This same pigment was used by Indian artists to paint the Ajanta Caves and as dye in ancient Japan 42 Ivory black also known as bone char was originally produced by burning ivory and mixing the resulting charcoal powder with oil The color is still made today but ordinary animal bones are substituted for ivory Mars black is a black pigment made of synthetic iron oxides It is commonly used in water colors and oil painting It takes its name from Mars the god of war and patron of iron Dyes Good quality black dyes were not known until the middle of the 14th century The most common early dyes were made from bark roots or fruits of different trees usually walnuts chestnuts or certain oak trees The blacks produced were often more gray brown or bluish The cloth had to be dyed several times to darken the color One solution used by dyers was add to the dye some iron filings rich in iron oxide which gave a deeper black Another was to first dye the fabric dark blue and then to dye it black A much richer and deeper black dye was eventually found made from the oak apple or gall nut The gall nut is a small round tumor which grows on oak and other varieties of trees They range in size from 2 5 cm and are caused by chemicals injected by the larva of certain kinds of gall wasp in the family Cynipidae 44 The dye was very expensive a great quantity of gall nuts were needed for a very small amount of dye The gall nuts which made the best dye came from Poland eastern Europe the near east and North Africa Beginning in about the 14th century dye from gall nuts was used for clothes of the kings and princes of Europe 45 Another important source of natural black dyes from the 17th century onwards was the logwood tree or Haematoxylum campechianum which also produced reddish and bluish dyes It is a species of flowering tree in the legume family Fabaceae that is native to southern Mexico and northern Central America 46 The modern nation of Belize grew from 17th century English logwood logging camps Since the mid 19th century synthetic black dyes have largely replaced natural dyes One of the important synthetic blacks is Nigrosin a mixture of synthetic black dyes CI 50415 Solvent black 5 made by heating a mixture of nitrobenzene aniline and aniline hydrochloride in the presence of a copper or iron catalyst Its main industrial uses are as a colorant for lacquers and varnishes and in marker pen inks 47 Inks The first known inks were made by the Chinese and date back to the 23rd century B C They used natural plant dyes and minerals such as graphite ground with water and applied with an ink brush Early Chinese inks similar to the modern inkstick have been found dating to about 256 BC at the end of the Warring States period They were produced from soot usually produced by burning pine wood mixed with animal glue To make ink from an inkstick the stick is continuously ground against an inkstone with a small quantity of water to produce a dark liquid which is then applied with an ink brush Artists and calligraphists could vary the thickness of the resulting ink by reducing or increasing the intensity and time of ink grinding These inks produced the delicate shading and subtle or dramatic effects of Chinese brush painting 48 India ink or Indian ink in British English is a black ink once widely used for writing and printing and now more commonly used for drawing especially when inking comic books and comic strips The technique of making it probably came from China India ink has been in use in India since at least the 4th century BC where it was called masi In India the black color of the ink came from bone char tar pitch and other substances 49 50 The ancient Romans had a black writing ink they called atramentum librarium 51 Its name came from the Latin word atrare which meant to make something black This was the same root as the English word atrocious It was usually made like India ink from soot although one variety called atramentum elephantinum was made by burning the ivory of elephants 52 Gall nuts were also used for making fine black writing ink Iron gall ink also known as iron gall nut ink or oak gall ink was a purple black or brown black ink made from iron salts and tannic acids from gall nut It was the standard writing and drawing ink in Europe from about the 12th century to the 19th century and remained in use well into the 20th century Sticks of vine charcoal and compressed charcoal Charcoal along with red and yellow ochre was one of the first pigments used by Paleolithic man A Chinese inkstick in the form of lotus flowers and blossoms Inksticks are used in Chinese calligraphy and brush painting Ivory black or bone char a natural black pigment made by burning animal bones The oak apple or gall nut a tumor growing on oak trees was the main source of black dye and black writing ink from the 14th century until the 19th century The industrial production of lamp black made by producing collecting and refining soot in 1906 Astronomy A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravity prevents anything including light from escaping 53 The theory of general relativity predicts that a sufficiently compact mass will deform spacetime to form a black hole Around a black hole there is a mathematically defined boundary called an event horizon that marks the point of no return It is called black because it absorbs all the light that hits the horizon reflecting nothing just like a perfect black body in thermodynamics 54 55 Black holes of stellar mass are expected to form when very massive stars collapse at the end of their life cycle After a black hole has formed it can continue to grow by absorbing mass from its surroundings By absorbing other stars and merging with other black holes supermassive black holes of millions of solar masses may form There is general consensus that supermassive black holes exist in the centers of most galaxies Although a black hole itself is black infalling material forms an accretion disk one of the brightest types of object in the universe Black body radiation refers to the radiation coming from a body at a given temperature where all incoming energy light is converted to heat Black sky refers to the appearance of space as one emerges from Earth s atmosphere Image of the NGC 406 galaxy from the Hubble Space Telescope The night sky seen from Mars with the two moons of Mars visible taken by the NASA Spirit Rover Outside Earth s atmosphere the sky is black day and night An illustration of Olbers paradox see below Image of the central black hole of Messier 87 taken by the Event Horizon Telescope Why the night sky and space are black Olbers paradox The fact that outer space is black is sometimes called Olbers paradox In theory because the universe is full of stars and is believed to be infinitely large it would be expected that the light of an infinite number of stars would be enough to brilliantly light the whole universe all the time However the background color of outer space is black This contradiction was first noted in 1823 by German astronomer Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers who posed the question of why the night sky was black The current accepted answer is that although the universe may be infinitely large it is not infinitely old It is thought to be about 13 8 billion years old so we can only see objects as far away as the distance light can travel in 13 8 billion years Light from stars farther away has not reached Earth and cannot contribute to making the sky bright Furthermore as the universe is expanding many stars are moving away from Earth As they move the wavelength of their light becomes longer through the Doppler effect and shifts toward red or even becomes invisible As a result of these two phenomena there is not enough starlight to make space anything but black 56 The daytime sky on Earth is blue because light from the Sun strikes molecules in Earth s atmosphere scattering light in all directions Blue light is scattered more than other colors and reaches the eye in greater quantities making the daytime sky appear blue This is known as Rayleigh scattering The nighttime sky on Earth is black because the part of Earth experiencing night is facing away from the Sun the light of the Sun is blocked by Earth itself and there is no other bright nighttime source of light in the vicinity Thus there is not enough light to undergo Rayleigh scattering and make the sky blue On the Moon on the other hand because there is virtually no atmosphere to scatter the light the sky is black both day and night This also holds true for other locations without an atmosphere such as Mercury Biology The American crow is one of the most intelligent of all animals 57 American black bear Ursus americanus near Riding Mountain Park Manitoba Canada The black mamba of Africa is one of the most venomous snakes as well as the fastest moving snake in the world The black widow spider or latrodectus The females frequently eat their male partners after mating The female s venom is at least three times more potent than that of the males making a male s self defense bite ineffective A black panther is actually a melanistic leopard or jaguar the result of an excess of melanin in their skin caused by a recessive gene CultureIn China the color black is associated with water one of the five fundamental elements believed to compose all things and with winter cold and the direction north usually symbolized by a black tortoise It is also associated with disorder including the positive disorder which leads to change and new life When the first Emperor of China Qin Shi Huang seized power from the Zhou Dynasty he changed the Imperial color from red to black saying that black extinguished red Only when the Han Dynasty appeared in 206 BC was red restored as the imperial color 58 Japanese men traditionally wear a black kimono with some white decoration on their wedding day In Japan black is associated with mystery the night the unknown the supernatural the invisible and death Combined with white it can symbolize intuition 59 In 10th and 11th century Japan it was believed that wearing black could bring misfortune It was worn at court by those who wanted to set themselves apart from the established powers or who had renounced material possessions 60 In Japan black can also symbolize experience as opposed to white which symbolizes naivete The black belt in martial arts symbolizes experience while a white belt is worn by novices 61 Japanese men traditionally wear a black kimono with some white decoration on their wedding day In Indonesia black is associated with depth the subterranean world demons disaster and the left hand When black is combined with white however it symbolizes harmony and equilibrium 62 Political movements Anarchism is a political philosophy most popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries which holds that governments and capitalism are harmful and undesirable The symbols of anarchism was usually either a black flag or a black letter A More recently it is usually represented with a bisected red and black flag to emphasise the movement s socialist roots in the First International Anarchism was most popular in Spain France Italy Ukraine and Argentina There were also small but influential movements in the United States and Russia In the latter the movement initially allied itself with the Bolsheviks 63 The Black Army citation needed was a collection of anarchist military units which fought in the Russian Civil War sometimes on the side of the Bolshevik Red Army and sometimes for the opposing White Army It was officially known as the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine and it was under the command of the anarchist Nestor Makhno Fascism The Blackshirts Italian camicie nere CCNN were Fascist paramilitary groups in Italy during the period immediately following World War I and until the end of World War II The Blackshirts were officially known as the Voluntary Militia for National Security Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale or MVSN Inspired by the black uniforms of the Arditi Italy s elite storm troops of World War I the Fascist Blackshirts were organized by Benito Mussolini as the military tool of his political movement 64 They used violence and intimidation against Mussolini s opponents The emblem of the Italian fascists was a black flag with fasces an axe in a bundle of sticks an ancient Roman symbol of authority Mussolini came to power in 1922 through his March on Rome with the blackshirts Black was also adopted by Adolf Hitler and the Nazis in Germany Red white and black were the colors of the flag of the German Empire from 1870 to 1918 In Mein Kampf Hitler explained that they were revered colors expressive of our homage to the glorious past Hitler also wrote that the new flag should prove effective as a large poster because in hundreds of thousands of cases a really striking emblem may be the first cause of awakening interest in a movement The black swastika was meant to symbolize the Aryan race which according to the Nazis was always anti Semitic and will always be anti Semitic 65 Several designs by a number of different authors were considered but the one adopted in the end was Hitler s personal design 66 Black became the color of the uniform of the SS the Schutzstaffel or defense corps the paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party and was worn by SS officers from 1932 until the end of World War II The Nazis used a black triangle to symbolize anti social elements The symbol originates from Nazi concentration camps where every prisoner had to wear one of the Nazi concentration camp badges on their jacket the color of which categorized them according to their kind Many Black Triangle prisoners were either mentally disabled or mentally ill The homeless were also included as were alcoholics the Romani people the habitually work shy prostitutes draft dodgers and pacifists 67 More recently the black triangle has been adopted as a symbol in lesbian culture and by disabled activists Black shirts were also worn by the British Union of Fascists before World War II and members of fascist movements in the Netherlands 68 Patriotic resistance The Lutzow Free Corps composed of volunteer German students and academics fighting against Napoleon in 1813 could not afford to make special uniforms and therefore adopted black as the only color that could be used to dye their civilian clothing without the original color showing In 1815 the students began to carry a red black and gold flag which they believed incorrectly had been the colors of the Holy Roman Empire the imperial flag had actually been gold and black In 1848 this banner became the flag of the German confederation In 1866 Prussia unified Germany under its rule and imposed the red white and black of its own flag which remained the colors of the German flag until the end of the Second World War In 1949 the Federal Republic of Germany returned to the original flag and colors of the students and professors of 1815 which is the flag of Germany today 69 A flag used by the anarchist Black Army during the Russian Civil War It says Power begets parasites Long live Anarchy Benito Mussolini and his blackshirt followers during his March on Rome in 1922 Black uniform of Heinrich Himmler head of the SS the military wing of the Nazi Party 1938 Military Hussar from Husaren Regiment Nr 5 von Ruesch in 1744 with the Totenkopf on the mirliton ger Flugelmutze Black has been a traditional color of cavalry and armoured or mechanized troops German armoured troops Panzerwaffe traditionally wore black uniforms and even in others a black beret is common In Finland black is the symbolic color for both armoured troops and combat engineers and military units of these specialities have black flags and unit insignia The black beret and the color black is also a symbol of special forces in many countries Soviet and Russian OMON special police and Russian naval infantry wear a black beret A black beret is also worn by military police in the Canadian Czech Croatian Portuguese Spanish and Serbian armies The silver on black skull and crossbones symbol or Totenkopf and a black uniform were used by Hussars and Black Brunswickers the German Panzerwaffe and the Nazi Schutzstaffel and U S 400th Missile Squadron crossed missiles and continues in use with the Estonian Kuperjanov Battalion Religion In Christian theology black was the color of the universe before God created light In many religious cultures from Mesoamerica to Oceania to India and Japan the world was created out of a primordial darkness 70 In the Bible the light of faith and Christianity is often contrasted with the darkness of ignorance and paganism Modern day monks of the Order of Saint Benedict in New Jersey In Christianity the devil is often called the prince of darkness The term was used in John Milton s poem Paradise Lost published in 1667 referring to Satan who is viewed as the embodiment of evil It is an English translation of the Latin phrase princeps tenebrarum which occurs in the Acts of Pilate written in the fourth century in the 11th century hymn Rhythmus de die mortis by Pietro Damiani 71 and in a sermon by Bernard of Clairvaux 72 from the 12th century The phrase also occurs in King Lear by William Shakespeare c 1606 Act III Scene IV l 14 The prince of darkness is a gentleman Priests and pastors of the Roman Catholic Eastern Orthodox and Protestant churches commonly wear black as do monks of the Benedictine Order who consider it the color of humility and penitence In Islam black along with green plays an important symbolic role It is the color of the Black Standard the banner that is said to have been carried by the soldiers of Muhammad It is also used as a symbol in Shi a Islam heralding the advent of the Mahdi and the flag of followers of Islamism and Jihadism In Hinduism the goddess Kali goddess of time and change is portrayed with black or dark blue skin wearing a necklace adorned with severed heads and hands Her name means The black one She destroys anger and passion according to Hindu mythology and her devotees are supposed to abstain from meat or intoxication 73 74 75 Kali does not eat meat but it is the sastra s injunction that those who are unable to give up meat eating they may sacrifice one goat not cow one small animal before the goddess Kali on amavasya new moon day night not day and they can eat it In Paganism black represents dignity force stability and protection The color is often used to banish and release negative energies 76 or binding An athame is a ceremonial blade often having a black handle which is used in some forms of witchcraft 77 Sports The national rugby union team of New Zealand is called the All Blacks in reference to their black outfits and the color is also shared by other New Zealand national teams such as the Black Caps cricket and the Kiwis rugby league Association football soccer referees traditionally wear all black uniforms however nowadays other uniform colors may also be worn In auto racing a black flag signals a driver to go into the pits In baseball the black refers to the batter s eye a blacked out area around the center field bleachers painted black to give hitters a decent background for pitched balls A large number of teams have uniforms designed with black colors even when the team does not normally feature that color Many feel the color sometimes imparts a psychological advantage in its wearers Black is used by numerous professional and collegiate sports teamsIdioms and expressions Namesake of the idiom black sheep In general the Negro race of African origin is called Black while the Caucasian race of European origin is called White In the United States Black Friday the day after Thanksgiving Day the fourth Thursday in November is traditionally the busiest shopping day of the year Many Americans are on holiday because of Thanksgiving and many retailers open earlier and close later than normal and offer special prices The day s name originated in Philadelphia sometime before 1961 and originally was used to describe the heavy and disruptive downtown pedestrian and vehicle traffic which would occur on that day 78 79 Later an alternative explanation began to be offered that Black Friday indicates the point in the year that retailers begin to turn a profit or are in the black because of the large volume of sales on that day 78 80 In the black means profitable Accountants originally used black ink in ledgers to indicate profit and red ink to indicate a loss Black Friday also refers to any particularly disastrous day on financial markets The first Black Friday 1869 September 24 1869 was caused by the efforts of two speculators Jay Gould and James Fisk to corner the gold market on the New York Gold Exchange A blacklist is a list of undesirable persons or entities to be placed on the list is to be blacklisted Black comedy is a form of comedy dealing with morbid and serious topics The expression is similar to black humor or black humour A black mark against a person relates to something bad they have done A black mood is a bad one cf Winston Churchill s clinical depression which he called my black dog 81 Black market is used to denote the trade of illegal goods or alternatively the illegal trade of otherwise legal items at considerably higher prices e g to evade rationing Black propaganda is the use of known falsehoods partial truths or masquerades in propaganda to confuse an opponent Blackmail is the act of threatening someone to do something that would hurt them in some way such as by revealing sensitive information about them in order to force the threatened party to fulfill certain demands Ordinarily such a threat is illegal If the black eight ball in billiards is sunk before all others are out of play the player loses The black sheep of the family is the ne er do well To blackball someone is to block their entry into a club or some such institution In the traditional English gentlemen s club members vote on the admission of a candidate by secretly placing a white or black ball in a hat If upon the completion of voting there was even one black ball amongst the white the candidate would be denied membership and he would never know who had blackballed him Black tea in the Western culture is known as crimson tea in Chinese and culturally influenced languages 紅 茶 Mandarin Chinese hongcha Japanese kōcha Korean hongcha The black is a wildfire suppression term referring to a burned area on a wildfire capable of acting as a safety zone Black coffee refers to coffee without sugar or cream Associations and symbolismMourning In the West black is commonly associated with mourning and bereavement 82 5 and usually worn at funerals and memorial services In some traditional societies for example in Greece and Italy some widows wear black for the rest of their lives In contrast across much of Africa and parts of Asia like Vietnam white is a color of mourning In Victorian England the colors and fabrics of mourning were specified in an unofficial dress code non reflective black paramatta and crape for the first year of deepest mourning followed by nine months of dullish black silk heavily trimmed with crape and then three months when crape was discarded Paramatta was a fabric of combined silk and wool or cotton crape was a harsh black silk fabric with a crimped appearance produced by heat Widows were allowed to change into the colors of half mourning such as gray and lavender black and white for the final six months 83 A black day or week or month usually refers to tragic date The Romans marked fasti days with white stones and nefasti days with black The term is often used to remember massacres Black months include the Black September in Jordan when large numbers of Palestinians were killed and Black July in Sri Lanka the killing of members of the Tamil population by the Sinhalese government In the financial world the term often refers to a dramatic drop in the stock market For example the Wall Street Crash of 1929 the stock market crash on October 29 1929 which marked the start of the Great Depression is nicknamed Black Tuesday and was preceded by Black Thursday a downturn on October 24 the previous week The dowager Electress of Palatine in mourning 1717 Emperor Pedro II of Brazil and his sisters wearing mourning clothes due to their father s death 1834 Queen Victoria wore black in mourning for her husband Prince Albert 1899 Darkness and evil In western popular culture black has long been associated with evil and darkness It is the traditional color of witchcraft and black magic 5 In the Book of Revelation the last book in the New Testament of the Bible the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are supposed to announce the Apocalypse before the Last Judgment The horseman representing famine rides a black horse 84 The vampire of literature and films such as Count Dracula of the Bram Stoker novel dressed in black and could only move at night The Wicked Witch of the West in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz became the archetype of witches for generations of children Whereas witches and sorcerers inspired real fear in the 17th century in the 21st century children and adults dressed as witches for Halloween parties and parades The biblical Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse including famine riding a black horse painting by Viktor Vasnetsov 1887 Drawing of a witch from the illustrated book The Goblins Christmas by Elizabeth Anderson 1908 Count Dracula as portrayed by Bela Lugosi in the 1931 film version Clarinet playing witch in a New Orleans Halloween paradePower authority and solemnity Black is frequently used as a color of power law and authority In many countries judges and magistrates wear black robes That custom began in Europe in the 13th and 14th centuries Jurists magistrates and certain other court officials in France began to wear long black robes during the reign of Philip IV of France 1285 1314 and in England from the time of Edward I 1271 1307 The custom spread to the cities of Italy at about the same time between 1300 and 1320 The robes of judges resembled those worn by the clergy and represented the law and authority of the King while those of the clergy represented the law of God and authority of the church 85 Until the 20th century most police uniforms were black until they were largely replaced by a less menacing blue in France the U S and other countries In the United States police cars are frequently Black and white The riot control units of the Basque Autonomous Police in Spain are known as beltzak blacks after their uniform Black today is the most common color for limousines and the official cars of government officials Black formal attire is still worn at many solemn occasions or ceremonies from graduations to formal balls Graduation gowns are copied from the gowns worn by university professors in the Middle Ages which in turn were copied from the robes worn by judges and priests who often taught at the early universities The mortarboard hat worn by graduates is adapted from a square cap called a biretta worn by Medieval professors and clerics The United States Supreme Court 2009 Judges at the International Court of Justice in the Hague A Black and white police car of the Los Angeles Police Department American academic dress for a bachelor s degreeFunctionality In the 19th and 20th centuries many machines and devices large and small were painted black to stress their functionality These included telephones sewing machines steamships railroad locomotives and automobiles The Ford Model T the first mass produced car was available only in black from 1914 to 1926 Of means of transportation only airplanes were rarely ever painted black 86 Olivetti telephone from the 1940s A 1920 Ford Model T The first model BlackBerry 2000 Black house paint is becoming more popular with Sherwin Williams reporting that the color Tricorn Black was the 6th most popular exterior house paint color in Canada and the 12th most popular paint in the United States in 2018 87 Ethnography Further information Race and ethnicity in the United States Census Classification of ethnicity in the United Kingdom Demographics of Canada Demographics of Australia and Race and ethnicity in Brazil The term black is often used in the West to describe people whose skin is darker In the United States it is particularly used to describe African Americans The terms for African Americans have changed over the years as shown by the categories in the United States Census taken every ten years In the first U S Census taken in 1790 just four categories were used Free White males Free White females other free persons and slaves In the 1820 census the new category colored was added In the 1850 census slaves were listed by owner and a B indicated black while an M indicated mulatto In the 1890 census the categories for race were white black mulatto quadroon a person one quarter black octoroon a person one eighth black Chinese Japanese or American Indian In the 1930 census anyone with any black blood was supposed to be listed as Negro In the 1970 census the category Negro or black was used for the first time In the 2000 and 2012 census the category Black or African American was used defined as a person having their origin in any of the racial groups in Africa In the 2012 Census 12 1 percent of Americans identified themselves as Black or African American 88 Black is also commonly used as a racial description in the United Kingdom since ethnicity was first measured in the 2001 census The 2011 British census asked residents to describe themselves and categories offered included Black African Caribbean or Black British Other possible categories were African British African Scottish Caribbean British and Caribbean Scottish Of the total UK population in 2001 1 0 percent identified themselves as Black Caribbean 0 8 percent as Black African and 0 2 percent as Black others 89 In Canada census respondents can identify themselves as Black In the 2006 census 2 5 percent of the population identified themselves as black 90 In Australia the term black is not used in the census In the 2006 census 2 3 percent of Australians identified themselves as Aboriginal and or Torres Strait Islanders In Brazil the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics IBGE asks people to identify themselves as branco white pardo brown preto black or amarelo yellow In 2008 6 8 percent of the population identified themselves as preto 91 Opposite of white Further information Black and white dualism Black and white have often been used to describe opposites particularly light and darkness and good and evil In Medieval literature the white knight usually represented virtue the black knight something mysterious and sinister In American westerns the hero often wore a white hat the villain a black hat In the original game of chess invented in Persia or India the colors of the two sides were varied a 12th century Iranian chess set in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art has red and green pieces But when the game was imported into Europe the colors corresponding to European culture usually became black and white Studies have shown that something printed in black letters on white has more authority with readers than any other color of printing In philosophy and arguments the issue is often described as black and white meaning that the issue at hand is dichotomized having two clear opposing sides with no middle ground Heroes in American westerns like the Lone Ranger traditionally wore a white hat while the villains wore black hats Conspiracy Black is commonly associated with secrecy The Black Chamber was a term given to an office which secretly opened and read diplomatic mail and broke codes Queen Elizabeth I had such an office headed by her Secretary Sir Francis Walsingham which successfully broke the Spanish codes and broke up several plots against the Queen In France a cabinet noir was established inside the French post office by Louis XIII to open diplomatic mail It was closed during the French Revolution but re opened under Napoleon I The Habsburg Empire and Dutch Republic had similar black chambers The United States created a secret peacetime Black Chamber called the Cipher Bureau in 1919 It was funded by the State Department and Army and disguised as a commercial company in New York It successfully broke a number of diplomatic codes including the code of the Japanese government It was closed down in 1929 after the State Department withdrew funding when the new Secretary of State Henry Stimson stated that Gentlemen do not read each other s mail The Cipher Bureau was the ancestor of the U S National Security Agency 92 A black project is a secret military project such as Enigma Decryption during World War II or a secret counter narcotics or police sting operation Black ops are covert operations carried out by a government government agency or military A black budget is a government budget that is allocated for classified or other secret operations of a nation The black budget is an account expenses and spending related to military research and covert operations The black budget is mostly classified due to security reasons Elegant fashion Black is the color most commonly associated with elegance in Europe and the United States followed by silver gold and white 93 Black first became a fashionable color for men in Europe in the 17th century in the courts of Italy and Spain See history above In the 19th century it was the fashion for men both in business and for evening wear in the form of a black coat whose tails came down the knees In the evening it was the custom of the men to leave the women after dinner to go to a special smoking room to enjoy cigars or cigarettes This meant that their tailcoats eventually smelled of tobacco According to the legend in 1865 Edward VII then the Prince of Wales had his tailor make a special short smoking jacket The smoking jacket then evolved into the dinner jacket Again according to legend the first Americans to wear the jacket were members of the Tuxedo Club in New York State Thereafter the jacket became known as a tuxedo in the U S The term smoking is still used today in Russia and other countries 94 The tuxedo was always black until the 1930s when the Duke of Windsor began to wear a tuxedo that was a very dark midnight blue He did so because a black tuxedo looked greenish in artificial light while a dark blue tuxedo looked blacker than black itself 93 For women s fashion the defining moment was the invention of the simple black dress by Coco Chanel in 1926 See history Thereafter a long black gown was used for formal occasions while the simple black dress could be used for everything else The designer Karl Lagerfeld explaining why black was so popular said Black is the color that goes with everything If you re wearing black you re on sure ground 93 Skirts have gone up and down and fashions have changed but the black dress has not lost its position as the essential element of a woman s wardrobe The fashion designer Christian Dior said elegance is a combination of distinction naturalness care and simplicity 93 and black exemplified elegance The expression X is the new black is a reference to the latest trend or fad that is considered a wardrobe basic for the duration of the trend on the basis that black is always fashionable The phrase has taken on a life of its own and has become a cliche Many performers of both popular and European classical music including French singers Edith Piaf and Juliette Greco and violinist Joshua Bell have traditionally worn black on stage during performances A black costume was usually chosen as part of their image or stage persona or because it did not distract from the music or sometimes for a political reason Country western singer Johnny Cash always wore black on stage In 1971 Cash wrote the song Man in Black to explain why he dressed in that color We re doing mighty fine I do suppose In our streak of lightning cars and fancy clothes But just so we re reminded of the ones who are held back Up front there ought to be a man in black A little black dress from 1964 The Duke of Windsor was the first to wear midnight blue rather than black evening dress which looked blacker than black in artificial light French singer Edith Piaf always wore black on stage Country western singer Johnny Cash called himself the man in black Image of his performance in Bremen Northern Germany in September 1972 American violinist Joshua Bell wears black on stage Model Fabiana Semprebom at New York Fashion Week 2006See also Wikimedia Commons has media related to Black Wikiquote has quotations related to Black Black Rose disambiguation Lists of colors Rich black which is different from using black ink alone in printing Shades of blackReferencesNotes and citations Definition of achromatic Free Dictionary Archived from the original on August 17 2015 Retrieved August 30 2015 a b c Heller 2009 pp 105 26 St Clair Kassia 2016 The Secret Lives of Colour London John Murray p 262 ISBN 9781473630819 OCLC 936144129 Wilkinson Richard H 2003 The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05120 7 a b c St Clair 2016 p 261 Eva Heller 2000 Psychologie de la couleur effets et symboliques pp 105 27 a b Heller Eva Psychologie de la couleur effets et symboliques 2009 p 126 a b c Jennifer Chu September 12 2019 MIT engineers develop blackest black material to date MIT News Office Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved August 10 2020 a b c d Michel Pastoureau Noir Histoire d une couleur p 34 African nation named for the river 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5 Michel Pastoureau Noir histoire d une couleur pp 114 15 Eva Heller Psychologie de la couleur effets et symboliques p 226 Fenton Laura August 1 2018 Black is the new black Curbed Archived from the original on August 7 2018 Retrieved August 7 2018 Through the Decades United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on March 30 2018 Retrieved January 18 2012 The Classification of Ethnic Groups National Statistics February 16 2001 Archived from the original on April 6 2007 Retrieved 2007 04 20 1 Archived May 22 2013 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Canadian census ethnicity IBGE 2008 PNAD Populacao residente por cor ou raca situacao e sexo Archived September 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Pre 1952 Historical Timeline National Security Agency Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Retrieved May 30 2011 a b c d Eva Heller Psychologie de la couleur effets et symboliques p 119 Stefano Zuffi Color in Art p 308 Bibliography Pastoureau Michael 2008 Black The History of a Color Princeton University Press p 216 ISBN 978 0691139302 Heller Eva 2009 Psychologie de la couleur Effets et symboliques Pyramyd French translation ISBN 978 2 35017 156 2 Zuffi Stefano 2012 Color in Art Abrams ISBN 978 1 4197 0111 5 Gage John 2009 La Couleur dans l art Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 2 87811 325 9 Flam Jack 1995 Matisse on Art University of California Press ISBN 0 520 20037 3 Cranshaw Whitney 2004 Garden Insects of North America Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 09560 4 Gottsegen Mark 2006 The Painter s Handbook A Complete Reference New York Watson Guptill Publications ISBN 0 8230 3496 8 Varichon Anne 2000 Couleurs pigments et teintures dans les mains des peuples Paris Editions du Seuil ISBN 978 2 02 084697 4 Jalland Patricia 2000 Death in the Victorian Family Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198208327 Broecke Lara 2015 Cennino Cennini sIl Libro dell Arte a New English Translation and Commentary with Italian Transcription Archetype ISBN 978 1 909492 28 8 Listen 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