Color Myths (Debunked)

Debunked myths, truths, and interesting facts I learned during the course of my Colorphilia Research.

Myth: The turkey (bird) was named after the country.
Truth: The turkey (bird) was named after because it had turquoise coloring.
More Interesting Fact: The word "turquoise" for the stone also has nothing to do with the country.

The True Meaning of Turkey
The Turkey (fowl) was named after the color of Turquoise (stone) whose name predated any connection to Türkiye (country).

Myth: The ancient Greeks didn't see the color blue.
Truth: The myth is based on the misunderstanding of a phrase in Homer.
More Interesting Fact: Red wine did not exist in the ancient world.

On the Color of Ancient Wine
This newsletter includes an intro to computer science, a quick explainer in vinification (winemaking), swine-ish sailors, biblical leprosy, the Passover Seder, bright-eyed goddesses, tithing, and raisin wine.

Myth: The Dutch created orange carrots in order to honor the House of Orange.
Truth: There is proof of orange carrots in Dutch art before 1580.
More Interesting Fact: Before the color wheel, what we would describe as the color orange, was referred to as "golden".

Down another rabbit hole... (Or “why are carrots orange?”)
As I mentioned in my initial newsletter, I tend to go down a lot of random “rabbit holes” during my research. It seemed fitting, then, that I began this time with a theory I had about orange carrots.

Myth: There are seven colors in the rainbow, ROY G. BIV (Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet.
Truth: ROY G. BIV is based on a misunderstanding of Sir Isaac Newton's Optics and his desire to connect it with the 7 notes in an octave, and even then, was referring to colors in the spectrum of refracted light.
More Interesting Fact: There is a relationship between the chromatic scales in music and color.

Musical Scales and Color Spectra
A reexamination of Newton’s connection between the music and color.

Myth: Tekhelet, or the biblical blue, was harvested from snails.
Truth: The biblical blue was the product of a plant-based dye.
More Fascinating Fact: Medieval rabbis believed tekhelet to be green, not blue.

The Biblical (and Post-Biblical) Blues
An iconoclastic exploration into the biblical colors of tekhelet and argaman.

Myth: Bah Bah Black Sheep was written in response to an 18th century wool tax.
Truth: Bah Bah Black Sheep was a poorly translated poem by William Caxton, the first printer in England (15th century).
More Interesting Fact: Bah Bah Black Sheep was originally about a yearly tribute of wool to Mars, Venus, and Cupid.

Bah, Black Sheep.
Spoiler alert: The little boy in the song was Cupid.

Myth: Tangerines were named as such because they were imported from the port of Tangier.
Interesting Truth: Tangerine is based on an Old Tupi (language of indigenous Brazilians) word meaning "Tree with Red Fruit".
Additional Interesting Fact: The mandarin orange's Chinese name was based on the word for cinnabar, a highly valued reddish-orange pigment.

Misunderstanding Portuguese Shepherds
The art of being completely lost in translation of citrus fruits.

Myth: Various indigenous tribes around the world believed that photographs steal your soul.
Truth: The western world believes photographs steal your soul.
More Interesting Fact: US law believes that there is an intangible essence related to each human, and the word "soul" is as good as any to use to describe it.

Does a photograph steal your soul?
The answer is yes.

Statement: "Orange" comes from the same Arabic root as "naranja".
Truth: While the word "orange" is a nod to the same Arabic root of "naranja", the specific word was chosen to relate to "golden apple (pomme d'orange)"
More Interesting Fact: When the word "orange" was invented, they knew of a history of golden apples, and mistakenly thought the word "nerantzium" was the Ancient Greek word for "orange". This was due to it being a translation from Arabic to Hebrew to Latin.

So, I was wrong about oranges.
Who knew that a simple word could be so complex.