In regards to archaic values like shillings and pounds in the Middle Ages, the term of art used by experts and academics is to say that they were "moneys-of-account". But what does that mean, exactly? Let's be very clear, it indicates this: Shillings and pounds were not coins; they were not paper banknotes; they weren't anything physical that you could hold in your hand or carry around whatsoever. They were purely abstract counting units.
Here's an analogy from the current day -- we frequently speak of a "Grand" and know that this indicates a value of one thousand dollars. "This computer cost two grand"; "You could buy that used car for ten grand"; "We spent thirty grand on the wedding". (Or perhaps you prefer a "G" or a "K" or a "dime". ) But of course, there is no "grand" physical money, like a coin or a banknote. We know that it's a counting concept, separate and distinct from the legal notes that we carry around with us. In principle, you could walk into a dealership and pay for a car in cash, and you'd fork over a wad of one hundred $100 bills (or something). You can even write in your ledger something like "10K" and conveniently record the transaction. *
So the same is true with shillings and pounds in a medieval context. When Charlemagne first established the 1:20:240 money system (denier/sou/livre, or penny/shilling/pound; around 800 A.D.), only the smallest "deniers" were actually minted (each 1/240th of a pound weight of silver metal); no other coins existed. Accounting books were kept, recording prices and purchases in shillings/pounds, but they weren't coins that you could carry around with you and hand over to a merchant. And so it was throughout the entire Middle Ages; although a wide variety of silver and gold coins came into use, they weren't ever so large as to be worth an entire shilling or pound.
For example, the first coin I can find that was worth "one pound value" is the English Gold Sovereign, first minted in 1489 (which I'll point out counts as being after the end of the Middle Ages). And even this was meant as bullion only (it had no numerical value stamped on it). As one site on gold coins says: "The First One Pound Coin: The gold sovereign came into existence in 1489 under King Henry VII... The pound sterling had been a unit of account for centuries, as had the mark. Now for the first time a coin denomination was issued with a value of one pound sterling." Or here (University of London Institute of Historical Research): "Values in the treasure were calculated in pounds, shillings and pence... although there were no coins equal to pounds and shillings and would not be until Henry VII's reign." Or this (Gies, Life in a Medieval City, p. 99): "The livre (pound) and sou (shilling), though used to count with throughout Europe, do not yet actually exist as coins."
So, in summary -- "Moneys-of-account" actually means "Counting units of value that did not physically exist in any form". Nobody anywhere ever minted a gold coin worth 240 of their smallest coins, until almost the 16th century (and therefore it would be ahistorical, and present many problems, if we presented such a system in D&D). Can you find any examples to the contrary?
(I've mentioned this in passing in prior money blogs, but wanted to highlight it on its own here.)
* The U.S. government did print $1,000 bills at one time, but they were discontinued in 1945, and have not been legal tender for several decades.
This is fascinating. Thanks for sharing your info on this topic!
ReplyDeleteIn the last D&D game I ran I ditched all the cp/sp/gp at chargen, let everyone choose 5 starting items from a list, and one item was "pouch with 20 silver coins". Everything else in the adventure was a silver coin, or a valuable item (eg. gold candlestick etc)
After reading this I think I might make this standard. :)
Again, great post. I think I might go with Stuart's idea, as well....
ReplyDeleteClearly I need to abandon all the pound coins in my campaign in favor of gold marks.
ReplyDeleteJust kidding.
I really like Stuart's idea of putting a bag o' coins on the list of starting items you can pick from. That easily eliminates a step in the chargen process. I'm all for streamlining chargen.
This is just one more reason why I tend to run my fantasy games in a broadly Arabian nights setting rather than a European medieval one. I find that my players tend to start from a more common baseline of assumptions and then its up to us jointly to decide what else the world is, without it all defaulting to a kind of flavourless pseudo-"modernity."
ReplyDeleteAlso, drams and dinars! And at least some people traveling clear across the known world and bringing back stories.
Here's the list of starting items I had for our game. I also changed "Standard Rations" to "Cheese". :)
ReplyDeleteI saw someone used "silver pennies" and I think anything where you name the coins is a nice way to start establishing the setting through character creation.
Does Alexis know about this?
ReplyDeletehttp://tao-dnd.blogspot.com/
I blew the 1:20:200 (240) ratio of copper/silver/gold on the first night of the campaign. Said it was 1:10:100. No one seems to care.
ReplyDeleteWord verification costsc - apt
I was at the Penn Museum at University of Pennsylvania a couple of weekends ago, and they have a display with lots of different ancient coins, in excellent condition. A number of them are electrum, which I'd never seen specimens of before.
ReplyDeleteThey also have a few 'billon' coins, which are an alloy of silver and copper or bronze.
It seems to me that the sort of accounting that players do on their character sheets is analogous to the use of historical units of account. So in my silver-standard game I deal with large numbers of silver coins as pounds sterling, with 100 coins to a lb. This interfaces well with a lb-based encumbrance system, and with treasure generation in 1000s of coins (I just divide by 1000 and read the result as lbs). So I'm fudging the difference between tower pounds and avoirdupois pounds, and decimalized and predecimalized pounds sterling, but...I'm ok with that.
ReplyDeleteTen silver pieces = £1 (ie, 1lb of silver). Forget about specific coins completely and just deal in weight. How many D&D characters care about amounts less than 10sp anyway?
ReplyDeleteWell... (re: Alexander and Nagora) those would probably be issues more on-topic for the other money blogs I had in the past. You probably already know what I actually do in my games.
ReplyDeleteAn interesting fact to mention, is that the lack of copper coins made everyday dealings a bit cumbersome. A silver piece would buy you around eight to ten pints of ale, so most items of this low value was dealt with either bye exchange of goods or bye trust (i.e. recordkeeping).
ReplyDeleteSource: Lectures with prof. Richard Holt, Uni. of Tromsø.
CM: I guess that would make sense. Of course, what you really mean is that a real-world penny would buy about 8 pints (1 gallon of ale). (Agreed?) And my argument is always that that has the same status as the D&D copper piece.
ReplyDeleteWhat D&D means by a "silver piece" has to be larger than that, like a sterling silver Groat (4 pence). As per prior money blogs.
Very interesting.
ReplyDeleteSingapore has only just stopped printing SGD10,000 dollar notes as part of their legal tender, largely because of pressure from the USA because of how such a large note facilitated money laundering and drug trafficking.
Anyway, fascinating piece of history. Thanks for posting.
Wow, to me that's interesting news. Thanks for the comment!
Delete>Nobody anywhere ever minted a gold coin worth 240 of their smallest coins, until almost the 16th century (and therefore it would be ahistorical, and present many problems, if we presented such a system in D&D). Can you find any examples to the contrary?
ReplyDeleteRoman gold coins were worth more than 240x their lowest bronze or copper denomination in many periods. e.g. 1 aurum = 25 denarii = 400 asses as of 140 BC.
A Byzantine gold solidus/bezant/nomisma was worth thousands of bronze nummi. Single-nummus coins were struck at first, but even when they fell out of favour the larger 5, 10, 20, or 40-nummus coins would also qualify (40 being borderline.) These would be during the late Roman/early Medieval period.
The later Byzantine gold hyperpyron was worth 864 copper tetartera - eventually falling as low as 288 tertartera due to debasement - during the Komnenian dynasty.
Several ancient Chinese currencies would match your challenge, but generally not super stable ones, not coin-shaped, or both. e.g. Xin dynasty coinage.
Double-checking, I realized you neglected farthings! 1 silver farthing = 4 pence, debuted c. 1200.
ReplyDeleteIn the UK you then had the florin ( = 6s = 72d = 288 copper farthings) and noble ( = 6s 8d = 81d = 324 farthings) in 1344, which would technically be the first time England minted coins more than 244x their lowest denomination. In 1464 the noble was raised to 8s 4d = 100d = 400 farthings.
Still, at the end of the day all of this is nitpicking. If anything it reinforces that a sp standard is eminently realistic.
Thanks for checking on that. I might have been a bit sloppy in phrasing that question, in that I think the whole post was meant in the context of "in the Middle Ages" (so this second point is particularly helpful).
DeleteI'll point out that in later writings by Gygax (Gord novels, Tharizdun module) who posits bronze pieces at a value 1 cp = 4 bp (and farthings were bronze in the early 20th c.) So likely Gygax had a semi-murky mental model of farthings = bp, pennies = cp, shillings = sp, pounds = gp.