

Electricity,
it's a child of the 19th-century, right? The Romans might have been
pretty clever but they never mastered putting a D cell in a torch...or
did they? There does seem to be at least some evidence of wet-cell
batteries being used on the peripheries of the Roman Empire. The famous
Baghdad Battery is more closely related to the post-Persian Parthian
Empire, but these two ancient super powers shared borders, Greek culture
and technology. Okay, so what was the Baghdad battery? Several
five-inch tall clay jars have been found around Mesopotamia (modern day
Iraq) containing hollow copper cylinders and iron rods that appear to
function as anodes and cathodes when the jar is filled with acid.
Voltages of up to 0.5-volts have been recorded from modern copies of
these vessels using vinegar, and their performance could certainly be
boosted if a stronger acid were to be used - the Romans and Parthians
would have been quite capable of manufacturing sulphuric and
hydrochloric acids which should be able to boost these wet-cells into
the region of 4 or 5 volts. All right, so they had a battery...what was
it used for? There's a couple of theories. During this period the Romans
and the Egyptians were using bio-electric fish - such as the Torpedo
Fish (the electric ray) - to numb severe pain; including gout, child
birth and migraines. One could imagine an electric ray would be hard to
find in the Mesopotamian deserts, so a 'clay ray' battery might have
been a worthy alternative. Then there's the jewellers. Just as we dress
up silver by electroplating it with gold, the ancients probably cottoned
on pretty quickly to the same game. Importantly, both pain relief and
fiddling the jewellery would have provided sufficient cash equity to
experiment with battery technology if nothing else. But is that all?
Well, maybe. These 'batteries' don't show up in Roman or Parthian
rubbish dumps like an Eveready or Duracel would these days...but, maybe,
just maybe, Thomas Edison wasn't the first guy to invent the light
bulb...more on that later.
Find out if Calvus had a light bulb moment
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