Money in Smiths Bible Dictionary
1. Uncointed money. --It is well known that ancient nations
that were without a coinage weighed the precious metals, a
practice represented on the Egyptian monuments, on which
gold and silver are shown to have been kept in the form of
rings. We have no evidence of the use of coined money before
the return from the Babylonian captivity; but silver was
used for money, in quantities determined by weight, at least
as early as the time of Abraham; and its earliest mention is
in the generic sense of the price paid for a slave. Ge 17:13
The 1000 pieces of silver paid by Abimelech to Abraham, Ge
20:16 and the 20 pieces of silver for which Joseph was sold
to the Ishmaelites, Ge 37:28 were probably rings such as we
see on the Egyptian monuments in the act of being weighed.
In the first recorded transaction of commerce, the cave of
Machpelah is purchased by Abraham for 400 shekels of silver.
The shekel weight of silver was the unit of value through
the whole age of Hebrew history, down to the Babylonian
captivity.
2. Coined money. --After the captivity we have the
earliest mention of coined money, in allusion, as might have
been expected, to the Persian coinage, the gold daric
(Authorized version dram). Ezr 2:69; 8:27; Ne 7:70,71,72
[DARIC] No native Jewish coinage appears to have existed
till Antiochus VII. Sidetes granted Simon Maccabaeus the
license to coin money, B.C. 140; and it is now generally
agreed that the oldest Jewish silver coins belong to this
period. They are shekels and half-shekels, of the weight of
220 and 110 grains. With this silver there was associated a
copper coinage. The abundant money of Herod the Great, which
is of a thoroughly Greek character, and of copper only,
seems to have been a continuation of the copper coinage of
the Maccabees, with some adaptation to the Roman standard.
In the money of the New Testament we see the native copper
coinage side by side with the Graeco-Roman copper, silver
and gold. (The first coined money mentioned in the Bible
refers to the Persian coinage,
1Ch 29:7; Ezr 2:69 and translated dram. It is the
Persian daric, a gold coin worth about $5.50. The coins
mentioned by the evangelists, and first those of silver, are
the following: The stater, Mt 17:24-27 called piece of
money, was a Roman coin equal to four drachmas. It was worth
55 to 60 cents, and is of about the same value as the Jewish
stater, or coined shekel. The denarius, or Roman penny, as
well as the Greek drachma, then of about the same weight,
are spoken of as current coins. Mt 22:15-21; Lu 20:19-25
They were worth about 15 cents. Of copper coins the farthing
and its half, the mite, are spoken of, and these probably
formed the chief native currency. (The Roman farthing
(quadrans) was a brass coin worth .375 of a cent. The Greek
farthing (as or assarion) was worth four Roman farthings,
i.e. about one cent and a half. A mite was half a farthing,
and therefore was worth about two-tenths of a cent if the
half of the Roman farthing, and about 2 cents if the half of
the Greek farthing. See table of Jewish weights and
measures. --ED.)
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