Coin Collecting at the Safir House
Biblical Coins and Weights

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Yo - I have no Dinero => The Hendin Scale of Money

I had a chance to acquire an signed copy of David Hendin's latest edition of Guild to Biblical Coins 6th Ed at the New York show. The text was not particularly cheap but I was happy to buy it from the vendor I enjoy supporting. Although the text is published by a rival Numismatic group, I hope I am not disturbing any primordial forces mentioning it here and doing a bit of analysis.

The text itself is an substantial compendium of ancient coins, a lifetime worth of work. It is filled with detailed historical and even theological information which forms the background necessary for one to gain real appreciation of the ancient coins associated with the Hebrew Bible. Hendin's text has biographies of the despots and rulers, Jewish or not, that impact the times of this coinage.

Bar Kockba Zuz Year3 Write Up
Bar Kockba Zuz Obverse 134-135CE
Reverse with Inscription

It is hard to comprehend, being that our lives are so short and our civilization is still so young, how many eras of civilization that Hendin's text covers. We start with the beginning of money itself, when the Shequal mentioned in the Torah was not even a coin, but a measure of weight. When my father Abraham brought the Cave and the fields of Machpeleh (מערת המכפלה) for 400 shequals of silver Avraham Avinu weighed the silver. It says so in the text.

Recent discoveries reported in The Biblical Archaeological Society prove that weights were used during the first temple period establishing that coinage had not yet taken hold. The discovery of a two sheckel weight weighed about 23 grams was reported. This weight is consistant with other sources and artificats [1]. Weights slowly evolved into shequal coinage, but the bible, Mishna and Talmud uses a dizzying array of ancient coinage types and drops terms for money without definition all about the oral and written traditions. There is even a whole tractate in the Talmud dedicated to the Sheckel as it was used, not just as general purpose coinage, but also for the annual tax used for the funding the Temple (Beit haMikdash) itself, and for taking a necessary census of the population without counting the people themselves (which was prohibited). Within it there is discourse and disagreement as to weights and even the nature of financial transactions. Hendin dives into this material with reasonable expertise which is complimented by his unparalleled knowledge in ancient Judean coinage.

As is common in a text such as this, some of the most important chapters come right at the beginning, before the specifics of endless numbers of coins. This is less true in the Guild than in many other such texts as Hendin subterfuges the entire text with important information, but it still holds that the introduction contains vital research on the methods of David Hendin's education in the field, and the basics of what these coins mean to us today and to the peoples of the epochs being discussed.

The hardest part, I found, was trying to understand the relationships between different coins and I had to fill in some outside information in order to really understand what the Guide was trying to say. In some cases, though, I have to conclude that there are editing errors in the text, or perhaps noted inconsistencies in the source material which should had been better annotated. I am used to scientific and medical journals where material is deeply and mathematically analyzed before publication. Numismatics, while interesting and worthwhile, doesn't really hold up to this kind of rigor. The focus is in on coins, their histories and values. Fewer scholarly journals are produced on these subjects than auction catalogs and auction catalogs are often the primary source for information on coinage in scholarly journals. In some ways, this is similar to early paleontology, or art history, and reflects both the collectors focus within the study of Numismatics, and its historical place as a separate area of study in the humanities.

Prutah Purchased from Zuzzim at NYINC 2022
Prutah Obverse
Prutah reverse with Inscription

David Hendin and the Biblical Coin Guild

We are lucky to have David Hendin and to be able to commune with him in his lifetime. Like many important scholars, David is a product of considerable luck in his time and place of birth. He was lucky enough to be a young man after the 1967 unification of Jerusalem and Israel under Jewish rule, and that allowed him to navigate within the old city of Jerusalem and the surrounding Judean and Sumarian hillside country before it became politically and legally impossible to collect coins in these areas. At the same time, he developed strong relationships with Arab experts on Jewish artifacts and Jewish coinage in a way that is increasingly difficult. It is hard to build this kind of trust today over the cultural divides and international interference doesn't make it any easier. David gives a discourse in his text at what is legal and illegal in the collecting of coins from Israel today. It is not as easy to legally remove bags of coins from the country as in years past. Every coin now needs to be documented in detail and if you want to walk out of the country with coin in hand, the coins need to be reviewed by Israeli agencies for quite a period of time. One can not just strike a deal with a licensed broker today and leave the country with a coin, as was true in days past. So the accumulated knowledge that David Hendin shares with the community is not just a precious resource, it is actually unique to him. There are others, but nobody with the combination of scholarship, documentation and hard work as David, and we will never have a window of opportunity for this to happen again in our lifetime. I. myself, have only had a single opportunity to meet David in person. I purchased my first ancient coin from him at the New York International Show in the early 2000's, perhaps about 2007. That coin, along with the rest of my collection was stolen, but you can still find it at http://www.mrbrklyn.com/herod.html . He insisted on explaining the coin to me in detail. Unfortunately, at the time I completely didn't comprehend what he was telling me, but I am learning. At the time, I had no idea even who he was, and at the same show I met Steve L Rubinger of Antiqua coins, Those are lost opportunities to learn from the maters. David's Amphora Coins URL has been delisted from the internet. which is sad. He no longer runs regular business.

Pouring over the coinage valuations is hard. There is discussion of money changers, but over these centuries, money is more of a free flowing concept then we are used to thinking. 10 dimes is always a dollar in US currency, and in ancient Judean currency 256 Prutah is a Shequal, except when it isn't, and that is the rub. Values of coins relating to each other and even official weights can change over time. Additionally, Judea and Israel often had no real mint, or just depended on superior foreign currencies, especially to Tyre Shekel which was reportedly of superior silver quality. And then there is roman and Greek and Persian coinage, the colonial rulers of Eritz Yisroel and Yedudah and THEN the Bar Koflka rebellion over-struck TetraDrachums ... coins the traditional size of four shekels, as single sheckels. As such, it is very confusing what coin values are at face value. But I went to the trouble of compiling a complete list, at least as extrapolated from Hendin's text

Bar Kachba Year 2 Zuzim Obverse
Bar Kachba Year 2 Reverse

Sheqel Chart - One Sheqel is Equal
1 Selah
24 Ma'ah
24 ge'ot
48 Kalbon
256 Prutah
2 Tarapik
1 Denarius
0.25 Sela'im
12 Pundion
24 Issar (which is said to be 8 Prutah but the math Is inconsistent)
1 Drachum
6 Obol
16 As
48 Chalkoi
32 Semisses
Addtionally:
One Aurei can by 10 amphor containers of wine - but the shekel conversion was not expressed
Additionally!!

One Bar Kofka Shekel is 4 Traditional Shekels or a Zuz

I hope this is correct

That all being said, these are some of my recent pick ups for Judean Coins

AE Prutah AD66-68 Jewish Revolt - Nero
AE Prutah AD66-68 Jewish Revolt - Nero
AE Prutah AD66-68 Jewish Revolt - Nero

I picked up 4 Prutah from Zuzzim Coins at the 2023 NYCINC international coin forum in NYC. The convention was at the Barkley Hotel and they were cheap because Isidore, Zuzzim's owner, hadn't identified them, and despite some efforts, I don't know what they are either. I present them here in the hopes that someone can help me identify them and email me (ruben at mrbrkly dot com).
Unknown Barley Prutah - Bronze
Palm - Luluv Prutah
Another Barley Grain Hendin 6274 AE King Agrippa Year 6 - 41/42/CE
Dual Cornucopia Prutah - Bronze
The Bronze Prutah reverse is difficult, but it has a very decent inscription. It probably is dual cornucopia with a rose or poppy in the center

[1] Iron Age weights found near temple mount



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