24 BOOK I. 



not many years after, he attained wealth from the mines of Fiirst, which 

 is a city in Lorraine, and took his name from " Luck."^° Nor would 

 King Vladislaus have restored to the Assembly of Barons, Tursius, a 

 citizen of Cracow, who became rich through the mines in that part of the 

 kingdom of Hungary which was formerly called Dacia.^^ Nay, not even the 

 common worker in the mines is vile and abject. For, trained to vigilance 

 and work by night and day, he has great powers of endurance when occasion 

 demands, and easily sustains the fatigues and duties of a soldier, for he is 

 accustomed to keep long vigils at night, to wield iron tools, to dig trenches, 

 to drive tunnels, to make macliines, and to carry burdens. Therefore, experts 

 in mihtary affairs prefer the miner, not only to a commoner from the town, 

 but even to the rustic. 



But to bring this discussion to an end, inasmuch as the chief callings 

 are those of the moneylender, the soldier, the merchant, the farmer, and the 

 miner, I say, inasmuch as usury is odious, while the spoil cruelly captured 

 from the possessions of the people innocent of wrong is wicked in the sight 

 of God and man, and inasmuch as the caUing of the miner excels in honour 

 and dignity that of the merchant trading for lucre, while it is not less noble 

 though far more profitable than agriculture, who can fail to reaUze that 

 mining is a calling of pecuhar dignity ? Certainly, though it is but one of 

 ten important and excellent methods of acquiring wealth in an honourable 

 way, a careful and dihgent man cem attain this result in no easier way 

 than by mining. 



" These Phoenician workings are in Thasos itself, between Coenyra and a place called 

 " Aenyra over against Samothrace ; a high mountain has been turned upside down in 

 " the search for ores." (Rawlinson's Trans.). The occasion of this statement of Herodotus 

 was the relations of the Thasians with Darius (521-486 B.C.). The date of the Phoenician 

 colonization of Thasos is highly nebular — anywhere from 1200 to 900 B.C. 



'"Agricola, De Veteribus et Novis MeiaUis, Book i., p. 392, says : — " Conrad, whose 

 " nickname in former years was ' pauper,' suddenly became rich from the silver mines of 

 " Mount Jura, known as the Firstum." He was ennobled with the title of Graf Cuntz 

 von Gliick by the Emperor Maximilian (who was Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, 

 1493-1519). Conrad was origicallly a working miner at Schneeberg where he was known 

 as Armer Cuntz (poor Cuntz or Conrad) and grew wealthy from the mines of Fiirst in 

 Leberthal. This district is located in the Vosges Mountains on the borders of Lorraine 

 and Upper Alsace. The story of Cuntz or Conrad von Gliick is mentioned by Albinus 

 (Meissnische Land und Berg Chronica, Dresden, 1589, p. 116), Mathesius {Sare-pta, Nurem- 

 berg, 1578, fol. XVI.), and by others. 



"Vladislaus III. was King of Poland, 1434-44, ^^^ ^so became King of Hungary in 

 1440. Tursius seems to be a Latinized name and cannot be identified. 



END OF BOOK I. 



