Arab Dinar
The gold dinar of the Arabs
rivaled the Byzantine solidus as the preferred international currency
from the eighth century until the thirteenth century.
The first generation of Arabs contented themselves with the existing monetary standards and coinage, but in a.d. 696 the caliph Abd al-Malik established a uniquely Islamic coinage. Its principle coin was called the gold dinar because the Arabs had called the Byzantine solidus a dinar. The term dinar seems to have stemmed from the word denarius, referring to a silver coin in ancient Rome. The gold dinar was equal to 4.25 grams of gold, compared to 4.55 grams of gold content in the Byzantine solidus.
Typical of the age, a religious dispute seems to have sparked
the decision to establish an Islamic monetary system. Apparently, the caliph
Abd al-Malik received word that the Byzantines were importing papyrus decorated
in Egypt with a Greek inscription reading “Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.” Abd al-Malik
then sent written instructions that the words “Allah is witness that there is
no God but Allah” replace the words “Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.” When the
Byzantine emperor learned of these developments he sent word to Abd al-Malik,
pointedly observing that the Byzantines dominated world coinage. He threatened
that soon Byzantine coins would bear messages insulting to the prophet Mohammed
unless the Christian inscription was restored to the Egyptian papyrus. This
threat provoked the Arabs to erect their own mint, and begin striking their own
coinage.
Plans for an Arab coinage were left in the hands of Al-Hajjaj bin Yusuf, governor of Iran and Iraq. He apparently established the first Arab mint in Wasit in a.d. 702–703. The government tattooed moneyers and moneychangers employed at the mint, and closely supervised them to guard against any sort of fraud. Mint employees caught in fraudulent acts had their hands cut off as punishment. On advice of Al-Hajjaj bin Yusuf, Abd al-Malik ordered that old coins be melted down and minted into Islamic coins, that the new coins be used throughout Islam, and that anyone refusing to accept the new coinage receive the death penalty.
Between a.d. 813 and 833 the caliph Al-Ma’mun reformed the Arab coinage, providing for greater uniformity in the coinage from different parts of the Muslim empire. The coin types of his reforms lasted until the eleventh century among the secular rulers within the Abbasid caliphate, and until the mid-thirteenth century in Iran and Iraq. By the end of the thirteenth century the gold coinage of Venice and Florence began to displace the Byzantine and Muslim coinage systems.
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