Carolingian Reform
Around a.d. 755 the Carolingian
Reform established the European monetary system, which can be expressed as:
1 pound = 20 shillings = 240 pennies
Originally the pound was a weight of silver rather than a coin, and from a
pound of pure silver 240 pennies were struck. The Carolingian Reform restored
the silver content of a penny that was already in circulation and was the direct
descendant of the Roman denarius. The shilling was a reference to the
solidi, the money of account that prevailed in Europe before the
Carolingian Reform. The solidi money of account originated from the Byzantine gold coin that was the
foundation of the international monetary system for more than 500 years. The
shilling acted to bridge the new monetary system to the old, an important role
because debts contracted prior to the Reform were defined in solidi.
For three centuries following the reform, the only coin minted in Europe was
the silver penny. Shillings and pounds were ghost monies—convenient shorthand
for keeping accounts, but not actual coins. Rather than writing down 2,400
pennies, it was easier to write or say 10 pounds, and rather than write or say
12 pennies it was easier to write or say 1 shilling. The silver penny was the
linchpin of the Carolingian system, but major transactions required unwieldy
numbers of pennies, counting into the tens or even hundreds of thousands, and
the pound and shilling were handy measures of pennies.
The Carolingian Reform was the work of Pepin the Short (r. 751–768), the
first king of the Carolingian dynasty and father of Charlemagne. In addition to
establishing the Carolingian monetary system, the Reform also reduced the number
of mints, strengthened royal authority over the mints, and provided for uniform
design of coins. All coins bore the ruler’s name, initial, or title, signifying
royal sanction of the quality of the coins.
Charlemagne spread the Carolingian system throughout Western Europe. The
Italian lira and the French livre were derived from the Latin word
for pound. Until the French Revolution, the unit of account in France was
the livre, which equaled 20 sols or sous, which in turn equaled 12
deniers. During the Revolution the franc replaced the livre, and
Napoleon’s conquest spread the franc to Switzerland and Belgium. The Italian
unit of account has remained the lira, and in Britain the pound-shilling-penny
relationship survived until 1971.
Even in England the pennies were eventually debased, leaving 240 pennies
representing substantially less than a pound of silver and the concept of a
pound as a money unit of account became divorced from a pound-weight of
silver.
After the breakup of the Carolingian Empire pennies debased much faster,
particularly in Mediterranean Europe, and in 1172 Genoa began minting a silver
coin equal to four pennies. Rome, Florence, and Venice followed with coins of
denominations greater than a penny, and late in the twelfth century Venice
minted a silver coin equal to 24 pennies. By the mid-thirteenth century Florence
and Genoa were minting gold coins, effectively ending the reign of the silver
penny (denier, denarius) as the only circulating coin in Europe.
No comments:
Post a Comment