Everything about Denarius totally explained
The
Roman currency system included the
denarius (plural:
denarii) after 211 BC, a small
silver coin, and it was the most common coin produced for circulation but was slowly debased until its replacement by the
antoninianus.
History
The denarius was first struck in or about 211 BC during the
Roman Republic and at the same time as the
Second Punic War, with a weight of 4.5 grams on average at the time. It remained at this weight for a while and then decreased to about 3.9 grams during the second century BC (a theoretical weight of 1/84 of a Roman pound). It then remained at almost this weight until the time of
Nero, when it was reduced to 1/96 of a pound, or 3.4 grams. Debasement of the silver began under Nero. Later Roman emperors reduced it to a weight of 3 grams around the late 3rd century . The value at its introduction was 10
asses, giving the denarius its name which translates to "containing ten". In about 141 BC it was re-tariffed at 16 asses, to reflect the decrease in weight of the
as. The denarius continued to be the main coin of the empire until it was replaced by the
antoninianus in the middle of the 3rd century. The last issuance for this coin seems to be bronze coins issued by
Aurelian between 270 and 275 AD, and in the first years of the reign of
Diocletian. For more details, see the article 'Denarius' in A Dictionary of Ancient Roman Coins by John R. Melville-Jones (1990).
Comparisons and silver content
It is problematic to give even rough comparative values for money from before the 20th century, due to vastly different types of products and of the impossibility of making an accurate price index based on vastly different spending proportions. Its purchasing power in terms of bread has been estimated at
US$21, from 2005, in the first century. Classical historians regularly say that in the late
Roman Republic and early
Roman Empire the daily wage for an unskilled laborer and common soldier was 1 denarius without tax, or about US$20 in bread. (By comparison, an
American laborer earning the Federal minimum wage makes US$47 for an 8-hour day, before taxes.) The actual silver content of the Denarius was about 50
grains, or 1/10
troy ounce under the Empire.
The fineness of the silver content varied with political and economic circumstances. By the reign of
Gallienus, the Antoninus was a copper coin with a thin silver wash.
Influences
Even after the denarius was no longer regularly issued, it continued to be used as an accounting device and the name was applied to later Roman coins in a way that isn't understood. The lasting legacy of the denarius can be seen in the use of "d" as the abbreviation for the British
penny prior to 1971. It survived in France as the name of a coin, the
denier. The denarius also survives in the common Arabic name for a currency unit, the
dinar used from pre-Islamic times, and still used in several modern Arabic-speaking nations. Currency unit in former Yugoslavia and nowadays in Serbia is
dinar which has its origins also in the Latin word of denarius. The
Italian word
denaro,
Spanish word
dinero, the
Portuguese word
dinheiro, the
Slovenian word
denar and the
Catalan word
diner all meaning money, are also derived from Latin "denarius". The currency unit in the Republic of Macedonia, the
denar, is closest in name to the Latin
denarius.
Value
The gold
aureus seems to have been a "currency of account", a denomination not commonly seen in daily transactions due to its high value. Numismatists think that the aureus was used to pay bonuses to the legions at the accession of new emperors. It was valued at 25 denarii.
1
gold aureus = 2 gold
quinarii = 25 silver denarii = 50
silver quinarii =100
bronze sestertii = 200 bronze
dupondii = 400
copper as = 800 copper
semisses = 1600 copper
quadransFurther Information
Get more info on 'Denarius'.
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