Gemstone
Black Agate
Black agate is chalcedony in its most elemental form — dark, dense, banded or solid. Ancient peoples kept it as a talisman; the tradition links it with the root and earth.
Black
Black agate is chalcedony in its most elemental form — silica laid down in slow, dense bands, black through and through or marked with the faintest grey striations that catch the light if you hold it to the window. The name comes from the Greek achates, after the river Achates in Sicily, where the stone was first described and traded in antiquity. The Greeks carved it into seals and amulets; Roman soldiers wore it set in rings for protection before battle. Every lapidary tradition that followed kept it somewhere near the edge of the shelf — not the rarest stone, not the most dramatic, but the one you reached for when something solid was needed.
The crystal tradition places it firmly at the root, the first chakra, where it keeps company with earth and Capricorn. These are associations built over centuries: the dense black stone, the feeling of the ground beneath the feet, the steadiness that Capricorn carries into its work and its ambitions. Protection and courage are the words the tradition has gathered around black agate — not dramatic courage, but the quieter kind: the willingness to stay, to show up, to keep a boundary.
The suggestion the tradition offers is to give the stone a role in a practice rather than simply a pocket. Hold it briefly in the morning, name a quiet intention — steadiness today, or courage for one conversation — and let it be the physical note that marks the beginning. Placed on a desk or worn at the wrist, it works the way a knot in a pocket works: a small, tactile anchor to return to throughout the day.
Below you'll find what the catalogue holds in black agate: tumbled stones, pendulums, jewellery and objects for the ground beneath.
Shop Black Agate
Kristallhelande stav svart agat hexagonal, 12cm
Rea pris £4795 Ordinarie pris £6135EnhetsprisBegränsat lager