Attic weight
Attic weight, or the Attic standard, also known as Euboic standard, was one of the main
The Attic weight was based on a drachma of 4.31 grams, but in practice the main denomination was the tetradrachm or four-drachma coin, which weighed approximately 17.26 g[1] in silver. For larger sums, the units of account were the mina (100 drachmae or 435 g), and the talent (6,000 drachmae or 26.1 kg).
In practice, this meant that the Attic weight standard was interchangeable with the Euboic standard used on the island of
History
Athenian coinage (and its weight standard) became one of the most important standards in the
During the 300 years of the
Attic trade weight
The Attic weight was used only for monetary sums of silver. For the weight of other objects a separate Attic "trade weight" was used, with a mina of 105 drachmae (457 g) – 5% higher than the monetary weight. During the fifth century BC, this became the main weight used in commerce in the Aegean basin and it was also enforced throughout the Athenian empire by the Athenian coinage decree. In the fourth century BC, the Athenians believed that this trade weight had been invented by the lawgiver Solon in 594 BC, but epigraphic evidence shows that it did not exist before around 500 BC. The earliest physical weight on the trade standard seems to have been hurriedly converted from a mina of 100 drachmae in the early fifth century, probably indicating that it was introduced as an emergency measure to reducing the cost of food and other commodities in a moment of crisis – most likely the evacuation of Athens in 480 BC during the Persian Invasion of Greece.[6]
See also
References
- ^ ISBN 90-04-04490-6.
- ^ Kallet & Kroll 2020, p. 148.
- ^ Kallet & Kroll 2020, pp. 148–149.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-521-39504-5.
- ISBN 0-8014-7597-X.
- ^ Kallet & Kroll 2020, pp. 150–151.
Bibliography
- Kallet, Lisa; Kroll, J. H. (2020). The Athenian empire : using coins as sources. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107015371.