India’s legendary wootz steel—An advanced material of the ancient world

Sharada Srinivasan and Srinivasa Ranganathan

ISBN: 9788173717215 | Year: 2014 | Hardback | Pages: 160 | Language : English

Book Size: 180 x 240 mm | Territorial Rights: World| Series IIM-UPIL

Price: 2500.00

About the Book

The book is reissued under the Universities Press–IIM series in Metallurgy and Materials Science. A fascinating history of India’s legendary high-grade steel—wootz steel—which was highly prized and much sought after across the world for over two millennia. Wootz steel was used to make the fabled Damascus blades.

Although Indian wootz steel was such an important material in the metallurgical history of mankind, there are no books devoted to Indian contributions. First brought out by Tata Steel in November 2004 as a celebration of the twin centenaries of J N Tata and J R D Tata, the book has been widely acclaimed. It is both scholarly as well as highly readable at the level of popular archaeo-science.

Contributors (Author(s), Editor(s), Translator(s), Illustrator(s) etc.)

SHARADA SRINIVASAN is Professor at the National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore. She has a PhD in Archaeometallurgy from University College, London. She is a Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and recipient of the Indian Institute of Metals Certificate of Excellence in 2007 for her inter-disciplinary contribitions to scientific studies in the field of art, archaeology and heritage.

SRINIVASA RANGANATHAN is Professor at the Indian Institute of Science and at the National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore. He is internationally recognised for his contributions to physical metallurgy and materials science. He served as the Founder Chairman of the Study Group for Metallurgical Heritage of India constituted by the Indian National Academy of Engineering. He is the recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Ministry of Steel, Government of India.

Table of Content

Foreword
Foreword to 2004 edition
Preface
Acknowledgements
About the series

  1. Wootz Steel as the Acme of Mankind’s Metallurgical Heritage
  2. The Three Ages of Civilisation: The Stone, Bronze and Iron Ages
  3. Steel and the Sword
  4. The Romance of Wootz Steel and the Damascus Sword
  5. Crucible Steel and Indian Armoury: Sixteenth- to Nineteenth-Century Accounts
  6. European Excitement: Sixteenth- to Twentieth-Century Experiments
  7. Replication of Wootz: Twentieth-Century American Adventures
  8. On Pattern-welded Damascus Swords: Imitation as the Best Form of Flattery
  9. Archaeometallurgy of Wootz: A Beginning without an End
  10. Ancient Steel Meets Modern Science: Twenty-First Century Advances

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