Page:Origin of metallic currency and weight standards.djvu/261

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Babylonian talent amounts to seventy Euboic minas." Properly speaking then according to the ancients, the only specific Babylonian talent was one employed for silver and which was one-sixth heavier than the Euboic talent. It is to be noted carefully that the standard employed for the weighing

Fig. 23. Lion weight.

of gold is not regarded by Herodotus as peculiar to Babylon or Persia, but is treated as identical with the common Euboic standard which was used for silver in many parts of Greece, and the stater of which was the only standard employed for gold in Greece, even in those states where the Aeginetic system was in use for their silver currency. Thus in the system employed for gold in the empire of the Great King the mina contained 50 staters, and the talent 60 minas. But the discovery

Fig. 24. Assyrian half-shekel weight of the so-called Duck type[1]

A. Side view showing cuneiform symbol = 1/2.

B. View from above.

of the weights known as the Lion and the Duck weights by Sir A. H. Layard at Nineveh whilst from one point of view most fortunate, from another may be regarded as the reverse.

  1. This weight (in my own possession) said to have come from India, and almost perfect, weighed 4.29 grammes.