A Brief History of Money in Islam and Estimating The Value of Dirham and Dinar
A Brief History of Money in Islam and Estimating The Value of Dirham and Dinar
A Brief History of Money in Islam and Estimating The Value of Dirham and Dinar
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Abstract: Before the appearance of Islam, dÏn¥r and dirham were the currencies in use
in the Byzantine and Iran empires, respectively. Both currencies were in use in pre-
Islamic Arabia and continued to be so in the Islamic state. In 74 AH the Islamic dÏn¥r
and dirham were minted. Estimating their value is a matter of considerable
importance to those doing research in Islamic economics. This paper estimates the
value of these two currencies using two methods ‘natural value’ and ‘purchasing
power’. It finds that a dÏn¥r was worth 261 to 293 thousand riyals or USD 32.5-36.5.
I. Introduction
Money has long been a medium of exchange, a standard of payment,
the unit of account and a store of value. The currencies in ancient time
were metal coins, particularly gold and silver. The dÏn¥r (gold) was
the currency unit in the Byzantine empire, and the dirham (silver) in
the Persian empire before Islam. A few decades after the conquest of
these empires, the Islamic state began to mint the Islamic dÏn¥r and
dirham. Estimating their equivalent value in modern times is
necessary in the study of the economic history of Muslims and the
economic system of Islam. The next section of this paper explains the
role of money, section three discusses the Islamic coins and section
four briefly reviews minting of money by Islamic states. Then, section
five estimates the value of Islamic currency using two different
methods, ‘natural value’ and ‘purchasing power’. The exchange rate
There were, however, problems with the use of gold and silver
coins, and these problems affected the economic exchanges and
productivity, eventually leading the institution of new forms of
money. Some of the problems of money in the form of coins were:
(i). It was easy for private and government swindlers to deliberately
change the content and alloy of the coins.
(ii). In the absence of a regulated method of minting coins, the coins
in circulation could take different forms.
(iii). The discrepancy between the weight and content of alloy in the
coins was high.
(iv). It was impossible to hold a balance between the amount of
coins and the rate of productivity in an economic system.
(v). Problems of counting and carrying the coins, as well as the
dangers of highway robbery, reduced the capacity for and
efficiency of transactions.
6). These names were also used for gold and silver coins. Arabia used
both dÏn¥r, the Byzantine currency, and the dirham, the Persian
currency (al-M¥wardÏ, 1938: 154; Ibn Khald‰n, 1336 AH: 48). When
Islam came, the Prophet did not change the weights that were current
in Makkah. He approved the use of dirham and dÏn¥r as money
(Bal¥dhurÏ, 1956: 452; al-MaqrÏzÏ, 1913: 6). Both are mentioned in
the Qur’¥n (3:75) “Among the people of the scripture there is one
who if you trust him with a weight of treasure, will return it to you;
and among them there is one who if you trust him with dÏn¥r, he will
not return it to you unless you keep standing over him. That is
because they say we have no duty to the gentiles. They knowingly
speak a lie concerning Allah” and the Qur’¥n also says: “they sold
him for a few dirhams” (Qur’¥n, 12: 20).
3 .1
1 . DÏn¥r
During the early Islamic era, the Byzantine dÏn¥r, that weighed one
mithq¥l (a unit of weight, equal to about five grams) was the currency
used by people in their exchanges. However, though it was the official
currency of that time, the state did not have any control over its use
by people in their exchanges. This situation lasted until the year of 74
(AH) (compare to Bal¥dhurÏ, 1956: 454), when ¢Abd al-Malik ibn
Marw¥n began the minting of new coins under the guidance of
Mu^ammad ibn ¢AlÏ (the fifth Shi¢ite Im¥m) (al-ShahÏd al-Th¥nÏ,
1976: 1/50), and the Islamic dirham began to be used instead of the
old dÏn¥r. The value and the weight of the Islamic dÏn¥r was the same
as that of dÏn¥r (al-DhahabÏ, 1934: 2; Im¥m al-ShushtarÏ, 1964: 79).
So the value and weight of the dÏn¥r was not changed. So the dÏn¥r
can be considered as a basic measure of monetary value, and other
values can be measured against it. Archeologists have unearthed coins
of the Islamic era, of which it is clear that the weight of the dÏn¥r,
coined at the time of ¢Abd al-Malik ibn Marw¥n, was about 4.25
grammes (ßub^Ï, 1976: 427).
3 .2
2 . Dirham
Dirham, the Persian (Sassanid) currency, was used before and after
the appearance of Islam in Arabia. During the caliphate of ¢AlÏ ibn
AbÏ>¥lib new coins were coined with the name of Islamic government
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The Islamic dirham was defined as the average weight of these three
dirhams:
10(1+0.6+0.5)
——————— = 0.7
30
The exchange rate between dirham and dÏn¥r was set out as
7/10. That is, 0.7 methgal was the weigh of the Islamic dirham. Using
this ratio, the weight of this dirham can be estimated as follows:
7
4.25(——) = 2.275
10
Thus, the weight of the Islamic dirham was 2.275 grams, and
this was the basis for the relevant consideration in Islamic law.
IV. Coinage
As stated earlier, the Islamic government did not have any control
over coinage on the value of in-money circulation until the year 74
AH. There was no consistency and growing dishonesty, in the alloy,
the content and weight of coins. In addition, when ¢Abd al-Malik ibn
Marw¥n came to know that borders of curtains imported from Rome
were woven with proclamation of the Christian Trinity, he ordered
this to be changed to a proclamation of the Islamic creed in the textile
factories of Egypt. It is in retaliation for this that the Roman emperor
threatened to engrave blasphemy against the Prophet on Roman
coins.
To solve this problem, the Islamic government sought to
establish control of and improve the monetary system. Thereafter, the
government established legal Islamic dirham, and steadily expelled the
old coins in circulation out of its territory, and the new money
replaced them.
After the establishment of the mint houses, the people paid a
charge to have their gold turned into coins. The charge was one
percent of the weight of the given gold, to cover the cost of minting
(wages and fuel). In this way, the government managed to take
control of the assay of the coins and did its best to raise their quality
and consistency. It was ¢Umar ibn al-¤umayrÏ, the governor of Iraq,
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who raised the purity of the silver coins for the first time. After him,
Kh¥lid ibn ¢Abdull¥h and Alghasry, the governors of Iraq at the time,
of Hish¥m ibn ¢Abd al-Malik, tried to raise the standard of the coins
with more care. Y‰suf ibn ¢Umar was the most successful governor in
this respect. Accordingly, the best money during the time of
Ummayads was the ‘Kh¥lidiyya’ and ‘Y‰sufiyya’ and Ab‰ Ja¢far took
the tribute based on these coins (Bal¥hurÏ, 1956: 455-456). During
the ¢Abbasid caliphate these efforts were continued and led to fruitful
results. Surviving coins from the Ummayads and ¢Abassid periods,
tested with modern equipment, show that the standard values of the
Ummayad dÏn¥r and the dÏn¥r current during the caliphate of H¥r‰n
al-RashÏd respectively were 87.9 and 97.1 percent of a common
measure (Im¥m ShushtarÏ, 1964: 80). These figures are remarkable,
given the relatively primitive equipment that would have been
available.
V. Value of Money
5 .1
1 . The ‘natural value’ of money
The ‘natural value’ of dirham and dÏn¥r refers to the value of the alloy
contents in dÏn¥r (gold) and dirham (silver). As mentioned, before the
appearance of Islam, dirham and dÏn¥r used to be exchanged
according to their weights. So the value of dÏn¥r and dirham was
determined by their contents (silver or gold), i.e., the value of money
was the same as the natural value of the metal content of the coins,
therefore, the term value of money (i.e. purchasing power) was not
under consideration.
Here, we estimate the natural value of the Islamic dirham and
dÏn¥r against the riy¥l (Iranian currency), based on the fitness of gold
during the Ummayad caliphate (87.9 percent), the weight of Islamic
dÏn¥r (4.25 grams), and the price of each gram of gold 18 carats fine
on 24th June, 2003 which is 71600 riy¥ls in Tehran. It is worked out
as follows:
87.9
4.25x——=3.73575
100
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That is, the amount of the pure gold in each methgal is about
3.74 grammes. To estimate the amount of net gold used in each gram
of gold, we have:
18
——x100=0.75
24
71,600
2.73575x———=261,168.16
0.75
Against the dollar rate of 8,500 riy¥ls, each dÏn¥r can then be
estimated to be about 37 dollars.
5 .2
2 . Monetary value
The ‘monetary value’, or purchasing power of money has been defined
as the amount of goods or services that can be purchased by some
specific amount of money. Today, the value of money is determined
using the price index and it is easy to determine whether the value of
money has risen or declined with reference to the base year.
To determine the monetary value of Islamic dÏn¥r and dirham,
we need to figure out their purchasing power and compare them with
current purchasing power. To do that, we need to study different
sources for information about the prices of goods and services and the
rates of wages. With that information, we can, in theory, form a
basket of goods and services and estimate the purchasing power of
Islamic dÏn¥r and dirham. However, there are some practical
limitations to how far and how well we can do this:
(i). Costs and prices at the time cannot be surveyed directly; they
have to be inferred and adjustments made for inflation at the
time.
(ii). The methods and costs of production were very different then,
compared to today. If we ignore these differences, it will be
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Ibn AbÏ al-¤adÏd says: ¢AlÏ ibn AbÏ >alib brought a denim shirt,
which cost 4 dirhams (Ibn AbÏ al-¤adÏd, 1959-1964: 2/15). As
recorded in the History of Baghdad (al-Kha~Ïb al-Baghd¥dÏ, 1913:
9/62), a medium quality and cheap shirt cost 8 and 4 dirhams,
respectively (al-Kha~Ïb al-Baghd¥dÏ, 1913: 9/62).
Now, in the second step, we form the next basket. The second
basket of selected goods are as follows:
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Daily Wage
Worker Dirham Riy¥l
Architect(i) 5 100000
Bricklayer(ii) 4 100000
Carpenter(iii) 2 55000
Mud worker(iv) 0.286 40000
Farm hound(v) 0.167 65000
Making a dress(vi) 0.0714 25000
Total 11.524 38500
Notes: (i) Gardeezy, 1934: 5.; (ii) BayhaqÏ, 1923: 1/411; (iii) BayhaqÏ, 1923:
1/411; (iv) al-Kha~Ïb al-Baghd¥dÏ, 1913: 6/275; (v) al-Kha~Ïb al-Baghd¥dÏ,
1913: 6/275; (vi) al-Kha~Ïb al-Baghd¥dÏ, 1913: 6/275.
VII. Summary
From ancient times, money has been used as a medium of exchange,
a standard of payment, a store, a gauge of value and also a unit of
account. The unit of money in times past was gold and silver, i.e.
Byzantine dÏn¥r and Persian dirham. These kinds of currencies had
their natural values. The natural value was always subject to cheating
by dishonest people. In addition to this problem, the counting and
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