Rossel Island Monetary System
Rossel Island, about 200 miles southeast of New Guinea, can
lay claim to one of the most novel and complicated primitive monetary systems,
one in which time was a significant factor in measuring the value of goods. The
actual pieces of money had been handed down virtually unchanged to successive
generations since time immemorial and allegedly were of divine origin.
Rossel money split into two variations. Dap money came in single
polished pieces of shells, and ko money in sets of 10 discs made from
shells. Dap money covered a larger range of values, and stretched into the
smallest values, whereas ko money exchanged hands in the larger transactions.
These two variations bore some gender connotation; dap money was looked upon as
men’s money and ko money as women’s money. Some goods were only priced in one
type of money, and other goods in a combination of dap and ko money.
The system of denominations of shells of different values made the Rossel
money unique among primitive currencies. The actual names were a bit clumsy but
22 different values are represented. For simplification it is easiest to regard
the lowest denomination as number 1, the next lowest denomination as number 2
and so on, until the largest denomination of number 22 is reached. Dap came in all 22 denominations, but ko
came only in denominations of numbers 8 through 22. One denomination was not a
multiple of other denominations, and no one denomination was equivalent to a
fixed number of other denominations, contrary to the United States monetary
system in which 100 pennies equal a dollar. A good costing a number 10 could not
be purchased with anything but a number 10, and not in a multiple of smaller
denominations.
The differences in value between denominations were based on the amount of
time one denomination would have to be loaned out before repayment could be
required in another denomination. If a number 10 was loaned out for a length of
time, the loan had to be repaid in a number 11. A loan of a number 10 for longer
lengths of time called for repayment in a number 12, or a higher denomination,
depending upon the length of the loan.
Transactions involved a highly elaborate system of credit. Suppose individual
A sought to purchase a product priced at number 10 in dap, and this individual
owned denominations below number 10 and above No. 10, but not in number 10. This
individual would borrow a number 10, and would repay the loan in the future with
a denomination higher than a number 10, as a means of paying interest. This
individual would not mind this arrangement, having the opportunity to loan out
his own dap denominations and earning interest also. If a number 22 was loaned
out, an initial interest payment was made in a smaller denomination, and in the
future the loan was repaid with another number 22. A special class of brokers
arranged these necessary transactions.
The currency units, or shells, of the higher-valued denominations (number 18
and above) were known on an individual basis by active financial traders. Only
seven currency units of denomination number 22 were in existence, all owned by
chiefs. The higher values were considered sacred. When a number 18 exchanged
hands the parties involved crouched down. Numbers 19 to 22 were kept enclosed,
always protected from the light of day.
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