So I found it interesting to see this comment from Reb Yisrael Isserl of Ponevezh, who learned by Reb Chaim Volozhener as a young person. This is from his Sefer מנוחה וקדושה, which has contemporary haskamos from the Netziv, the Pischei Teshuva, and Reb Betzalel HaKohen. It also has a modern haskama from Rav Shmuel Auerbach. So it's kosher.
This is from the end of the sefer. In the 1964 print, it got left out of the end and was printed on the second page and is titled
I had hana'ah from Reb Micha Berger's comment:
Or maybe coinage was invented in parashas Sheqalim, which is why HQBH needed to show Moshe what He meant visually.(Sheqalim 1:6, vilna 6a)
The mitzvah is simpler if Moshe could count half-coins, and not weigh random pieces of silver. But that doesn't mean that HQBH's revelation of the idea became commonplace for money.
Perhaps it wasn't until the idea of coinage or even of medallions kindled a lamp over some Lydian's head that the coin became a commonplace way of standardizing money.
He is suggesting that this is why Moshe Rabbeinu had to be shown the "matbei'a shel eish." Until that point, the concept of a uniform currency simply did not exist, and Hashem showed Moshe Rabbeinu that currency means that you take a certain weight of metal and you shape it and stamp it with an image that is unusual but reproducible, such that seeing the coin ensures that it is official, meaning that it reliably contains a specific weight of a particular metal.
So it could very well be that davka then was the first time mankind was introduced to the concept of a minted, standardized, currency.
There are still statements in Chazal about earlier coinage, such as in BK 97b,
Reb Avraham Wagner points out the Gemara in Psachim 54b that implies that currency is ancient and fundamental to human civilization.
Rashi
Silver coins made during the Late Bronze Age and used for payment were discovered at Tel Shiloh, north of Jerusalem, and at Tel Gezer, on the western slope of the Judean Hills, a new study revealed on Sunday.The coins were made in Anatolia, which today constitutes part of Turkey, and were apparently used as early as 17 century BCE. Another batch coins came from Tell el-Ajjul, presently located in the Gaza Strip; these were produced a century later, during the early Late Bronze Age, according to the new study conducted by the University of Haifa and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem."The transition to an economical method based on silver coins, which do not deteriorate and have a reduced volume and weight, presents many advantages and new possibilities which will certainly contribute to the urban and economic development of the entire region," said Dr. Tzilla Eshel, of the University of Haifa, who led the study.The study also showed that silver coins continued to be used frequently, evidence of long and stable trade relations in Anatolia, something researchers were unaware of until now.
See also
https://nws.report/education/65292/
UPDATE JUNE 2023
My cousins from Israel visited us today. One of my cousins is David Gellman, an archeologist who until recently worked for the רשות העתיקות, currently leading the excavations at the Givati lot. under the auspices of the Ir David foundation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Givati_Parking_Lot_dig
I mentioned this issue to him, and he concurred that coinage was not known in Eretz Yisrael until toward the beginning of the Bayis Sheini. He said that the articles I cited above are not talking about minted coins, they were pieces of plain silver that were used by weight, not minted with any image. So the question remains unanwered.
Or maybe coinage was invented in parashas Sheqalim, which is why HQBH needed to show Moshe what He meant visually.(Sheqalim 1:6, vilna 6a)
ReplyDeleteThe mitzvah is simpler if Moshe could count half-coins, and not weigh random pieces of silver. But that doesn't mean that HQBH's revelation of the idea became commonplace for money.
Perhaps it wasn't until the idea of coinage or even of medallions kindled a lamp over some Lydian's head that the coin became a commonplace way of standardizing money.
Excellent. Thank you. It would be possible that the coinage introduced to enable certain mitzvos was extremely limited even among the Jews, and only later gained....currency.
DeleteHow would we explain עובר לסוחר?
ReplyDeleteI don't know, unless it means of an immediately evident quality. Poor answer. Unless, as Reb Micha suggests, coinage was limited to mitzva use, like those fancy five shekalim Israel used to mint for Pidyon Haben. But one good thing - I was looking over something "I" wrote on the connection of Korban Todah and the mitzva of matza, ( https://beisvaad.blogspot.com/2017/04/korban-pesach-korban-todah-matza-and.html )and your hearos were amazing. Thanks again.
DeleteNo, that doesn't make any sense. If they were rare and dedicated to religious purposes, then עובר לסוחר would not make any sense. What does the socher have to do with it? And over implies everyday commerce. So I don't know the answer. That, and other problems, it why it was a comfort to see the sefer from R Yisroel Isserl, but the problem remains.
DeleteOver shabbos I happened upon the following: אגרות ראי"ה ח"ב סימן תקע"ד
ReplyDeleteהערה: הנני חושב שאע"פ שהתכונה המדעית בחקירות כאלו בנויה הי ע"פ רוב על היסוד של ה"איחור הקיצוני," ו"לא ראינו" היא אחת מהראיות היותר גדולות, בכ"ז א"א להשמיט השערות תמוכות במסורת, וטיבוע המטבעות בימים הקדמונים בישראל, שיש לו סימנים כ"כ ניכרים בהלכה ובאגדה, ראוי לתשומת לב, והיותר מוכר בזה הוא הדין שאין פודין מע"ש רק בכסף שיש עליו צורה, ונדרש מ"וצרת הכסף" והוציאו אסימון, ולא נעלם מכבודו, שבענינים הדתיים הנטיה לצורות עתיקות מנצחת תמיד, ואם היו מטבעות בלתי צוריות בעולם העתיק בישראל, היתה ראויה ההלכה להיות מקפדת דוקא על מטבע כצורתה הישנה, דהיינו אסימון
Fantastic find. אין כל חדש.
DeleteThank you very much.