existed and there was virtually no earlier national
coinage; at a very early period the Spanish towns
even began to coin after the Roman standard.(20)
On the whole, as Carthage coined only to a very limited
extent,(21) there existed not a single important mint
in addition to that of Rome in the region of the western
Mediterranean, with the exception of that of Massilia
and perhaps also those of the Illyrian Greeks in Apollonia
and Dyrrhachium. Accordingly, when the Romans
began to establish themselves in the region of the
Po, these mints were about 525 subjected to the Roman
standard in such a way, that, while they retained
the right of coining silver, they uniformly —and
the Massiliots in particular—were led to
adjust their —drachma— to the
weight of the Roman three-quarter -denarius-, which
the Roman government on its part began to coin, primarily
for the use of Upper Italy, under the name of the
“coin of victory” (-victoriatus-).
This new system, dependent on the Roman, not merely
prevailed throughout the Massiliot, Upper Italian,
and Illyrian territories; but these coins even penetrated
into the barbarian lands on the north, those of Massilia,
for instance, into the Alpine districts along the
whole basin of the Rhone, and those of Illyria as far
as the modern Transylvania. The eastern half
of the Mediterranean was not yet reached by the Roman
money, as it had not yet fallen under the direct sovereignty
of Rome; but its place was filled by gold, the true
and natural medium for international and transmarine
commerce. It is true that the Roman government,
in conformity with its strictly conservative character,
adhered—with the exception of a temporary
coinage of gold occasioned by the financial embarrassment
during the Hannibalic war(22)—steadfastly
to the rule of coining silver only in addition to
the national-Italian copper; but commerce had already
assumed such dimensions, that it was able even in the
absence of money to conduct its transactions with
gold by weight. Of the sum in cash, which lay
in the Roman treasury in 597, scarcely a sixth was
coined or uncoined silver, five-sixths consisted of
gold in bars,(23) and beyond doubt the precious metals
were found in all the chests of the larger Roman capitalists
in substantially similar proportions. Already
therefore gold held the first place in great transactions;
and, as may be further inferred from this fact, in
general commerce the preponderance belonged to that
carried on with foreign lands, and particularly with
the east, which since the times of Philip and Alexander
the Great had adopted a gold currency.
Roman Wealth