Return to Gold: 1300–1350
During the first half of the fourteenth century Europe saw
gold currency displace silver currency as the primary circulating medium. The
Carolingian reform of the eighth century had ended gold coinage in Europe, and
for over 400 years Europe had contented itself with minting the silver
denarius, a small denomination coin, predecessor to the modern penny. A
critical development in returning Europe to gold coinage was the discovery of
Hungarian gold deposits around Kremnica in Slovakia, which became producing
mines around 1320.
In the mid-thirteenth century Florence and Genoa had introduced gold coinage
and Venice followed later in the century with the gold ducat to rival the
Florentine florin. Dependence upon African gold restricted the supply of
the early Italian gold, limiting its circulation to the Mediterranean area.
After 1320 Hungarian gold grew in abundance, enabling Charles Robert of
Anjou, king of Hungary, to began minting gold coins in 1328. These gold coins
imitated the Florentine florin and were the first gold coins minted north of the
Alps. An exchange of Bohemian silver for Hungarian gold enabled John the Blind
of Luxemburg, king of Bohemia, to began coinage of gold florins coincidentally
with the Hungarian coinage as part of a Hungarian-Bohemian monetary
cooperation.
Hungarian gold profusely poured into Italy in exchange for Italian goods and
services. In 1328 Venice effectively abandoned a silver standard in favor of a
gold standard, and coinage of the gold ducat began to vastly outstrip the silver
grossi.
In the 1330s France and England borrowed from Italian bankers large sums of
gold florins to finance wars. The pope also subsidized France with vast sums of
florins, and in 1337 France began minting large quantities of it own gold coin,
the ecu.
Gold coinage began on a large scale in the Low Countries around the same
time. In 1336 the mint of Flanders began striking large quantities of gold
coins, and the mints of Brabant, Hainault, Cambrai, and Guelders first struck
gold coins in 1336 and 1337.
Most of the German mints striking gold coins during the fourteenth century
were located in the valleys of the Rhine and Main. One important exception,
Lubeck, the principal city of the Hanseatic League, received royal permission to
mint gold and silver coins in 1340. In 1342 Lubeck began striking gold Lubeck
coins.
England had made an abortive effort to coin gold pennies in 1257, roughly
coinciding with the appearance of gold coinage in Italy. England’s second and
more successful effort at gold coinage began in 1344. Edward III engaged
Florentine mintmasters and issued a gold coin, the leopard, which proved
unsuccessful because its official value in terms of silver exceeded its market
value. After adjustments in metal content, Edward II minted another gold coin,
the noble, valued at 6 shillings and 8 pence. Nobles, half nobles, and
quarter nobles became important components of English coinage.
Scotland first launched a gold coin in 1357, but the first gold coinage
failed, and a successful gold coinage had to wait until the end of the
century.
As gold coinage spread silver coinage took on the role of subsidiary coinage
suitable for small, local transactions, a role the silver continued to play
until alloyed token currency replaced full-bodied metallic currency.
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