Unfortunately, the rate of depreciation in modern forms of money takes place in decades or years, not over centuries.Cast from an original Roman Denarius coin dated to 91BC, this necklace depicts the bust of the Roman god Apollo on one side and the Roman goddess Minerva leading a chariot of horses on the reverse. Perhaps the worst legacy of the Roman denarius was the trend of governments to debase the value of the circulating coinage over time. This reference to the “d” in modern nails traces its roots all the way back to the Roman denarius. If you look to purchase nails, you can see the sizes referred to by “penny” or by the letter “d.” Thus, a 16d nail is 3” long, or is called a 16-penny nail. The denarius also has a residual reference in hardware. In Italian, the world is denaro in Portuguese it is dinheiro: in Slovene it is denar and in Spanish, the term is dinero. In multiple languages today, the word for money descends from the denarius. In the United Kingdom, the abbreviation for penny has always been the letter “d,” which also traces back to the denarius. The dinar is the monetary unit in the nations of Algeria, Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya, Serbia, and Tunisia. Today, the nation of North Macedonia uses a denomination called the denar. The influence of the Roman denarius denomination still pervades everyday life in many parts of the world, whether people realize it or not. Meanwhile, in the rise of the Arabian Empire, the gold coin was given the denomination of dinar, a term derived from denarius. cents are only made of copper-coated zinc.
![denarius coin denarius coin](https://vilmarnumismatics.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/15780_REV-984x1024.jpg)
New silver coinage with different denominations eventually displaced the penny, which deteriorated eventually to a copper composition. The “pound” unit was adopted as a monetary unit by the English, equal to 20 shillings (where a shilling was set as equal to 12 pennies) or 240 pence.īy 1100 A.D., the silver pennies started suffering debasement, with lower weights and silver purities. The official value was 240 pennies to the pound, or one pennyweight of 24 grains of silver, even though the actual silver content was only 22.5 grains. Late in the Eighth Century, silver pennies went into production in England. The silver content remained relatively constant for about three centuries, during which time this coin became the dominant trading coin in Western Europe. It was generically referred to as a penny or denier. The denarius denomination was revived in France during the reign of Carolingian king Pepin the Short (751-768 A.D.) The novus denarius was struck at the rate of 240 coins per pound of weight. Eventually, those coins were pretty much made of base metals with a silver wash on the exterior. rapidly lost silver purity, getting as low as 2%. Subsequent Roman silver coinage in the Third Century A.D. Production of the denarius for circulation ended during the reign of Emperor Gordian III (238-244 A.D.). Emperor Caracalla (198-217 A.D.) reduced the gross weight about 10%, with the silver purity headed down towards 50%. Thereafter the silver purity was repeatedly debased. Emperor Nero (54-68 A.D.) devalued the denarius again to 1/96 of a Roman Pound, weighing about 3.41 grams of silver, where the silver purity was also reduced to 94.5%. The weight the denarius was reduced to 3.9 grams of high purity silver, which was about 1/84 of a Roman Pound.
![denarius coin denarius coin](https://www.silburycoins.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/e238.jpg)
When Octavian formed the Roman Empire and became Emperor Augustus (27 B.C.-14 A.D.), he reformed the monetary system. Toward the end of the Roman Republican/beginning of the Roman Imperatorial era, the weight started to decline. For more than 150 years, its weight and purity stayed relatively constant. Initially, the denarius weighed an average of 4.5 grams of high purity silver (95-98%), equal to 1/72 of a Roman pound. It was initially established as the value of 10 bronze asses, though the relative scarcity of silver to copper led the denarius being revalued to 16 asses about 141 B.C.
![denarius coin denarius coin](https://www.silburycoins.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/t207.jpg)
This monetary unit’s name was derived from the Latin term “deni” which means “containing ten.” The denarius denomination was introduced in 211 B.C. In the case of the ancient Roman denarius, that is certainly true. Money has sometimes been called the footprints of history.