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Porcelain – invention - Explained by the Billy Meier Contacts
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Porcelain – invention
wikipedia/wiki/Porcelain
wikipedia/wiki/Hard-paste porcelain
wikipedia/wiki/Meissen porcelain
Important Note: For accuracy, please consult the Contact Report links for date, context,
and the German language originals. Numerous entries in this document have already
been superseded by corrected translations online.
Contact Report 475
Ptaah:
And as regards the porcelain, it is indeed the case that the young alchemist Johann
Friedrich Böttger is mistakenly credited with the invention of porcelain, although he did not
invent the porcelain, but truthly only developed it further after the death of the inventor.
The true inventor, who for the first time created porcelain in 1706, namely the red porcelain,
was Ehrenfried Walter Graf von Tschirnhaus, born on the 10th of April 1651 and deceased on
the 11th of October 1708, in whose service Johann Friedrich Böttger stood.
In 1708 Tschirnhaus succeeded in producing white porcelain for the first time, after which he
died shortly afterwards.
His assistant Böttger, born in Schleiz on the 4th of February 1862, deceased in Dresden on
the 13th of March 1719, was originally a pharmacist's assistant, and after Tschirnhaus' death he
continued the experiments.
Böttger alleged that he would be able to make gold as an alchemist.
In 1701 he fled from Prussia to Saxony, where August the Strong put him under an
obligation to produce gold, which of course he failed to do.
So in 1704 he was subordinated to Ehrenfried Walter Graf von Tschirnhaus, who already
since the years 1693 and 1694 was engaged in melting experiments with large burning