Bronze Standard of Ancient Rome
Early Romans replaced a cattle standard with a raw copper or
bronze metallic standard. Various authors report the standard as copper or
bronze, depending upon the translation of the Latin, which apparently used the
same word to refer to both copper and bronze. This metal was used to make farm
implements, rendering it valuable as money when the Romans changed from a
pastoral to an agricultural society. The Romans remained on a bronze standard
until the end of the Republic in 30 b.c.
During the fifth century b.c. a bit more refined form of bronze (or copper) money appeared, called aes signatum. This money took the form of regularly shaped bronze (or copper) bars with a specific weight. In the beginning one aes equaled a pound of bronze (or copper). These bars were stamped with an impressive variety of figures, including oxen and sheep, perhaps to create a psychological link between the new metallic money and livestock money. Swords, tripods, anchors, the Roman eagle, and fishbone-like markings are among the list of figures found on these bronze (copper) bars. During the fourth century b.c. the Romans began casting heavy
round coins, known as aes grave. These coins, definitely
circulating under the auspices of the government, came in sizes of various
fractions or multiples of a pound of bronze (or copper), and often bore the
image of a sheep, cow, or hog.
The weight of the aes steadily fell. According to Pliny, during the first Punic War in the third century b.c., “the Republic not having means to meet its needs, reduced the aes to two ounces of copper; by this contrivance a saving of five-sixths was effected, and the public debt liquidated” (Frank, 1959). During the second Punic War the weight of the aes was reduced to one ounce, and in 87 b.c. it was reduced to half an ounce to help pay for the Social War, a civil war that led to the end of the Republic.
The Roman language of money left an impressive legacy on our modern languages. The bronze coins were called pecunia, a reference to the images of livestock stamped on them. Pecos was the Latin word for cow, and in English money considerations are nowadays called pecuniary. The Latin word for pound, libra, was the predecessor of the English pound, the French livre, and the Italian lira. The word expenned meant “weighed out,” referring to the weighing of the asses in payment for goods. The English words “money” and “mint” evolved from the word moneta, the Latin term for the coins struck at the Senatorial Mint located in the Roman temple for the goddess Juno Moneta. Also, the English words “estimate” and “esteem” came from the Latin aestumare, meaning “to value in copper.”
During the third century b.c. the Romans began coinage of silver. These coins were struck, rather than cast, as the bronze coins had been. (Struck coins are stamped with hammers and cast coins are melted in molds.) By the middle of the second century b.c. bronze coins had lost much of their importance, and Augustus put the Romans on a bimetallic gold and silver standard in the last century b.c.
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