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XXI
From the early bronze age metal was used to
manufacture implements and weapons and copper or bronze in any form was a valuable trade good. Metal is particularly useful for barter because it is compact, portable, easy to store, and does not spoil. The first type of smelted bronze bullion metal cast by Romans was rough lumps of bronze known as "aes rude" (rough bronze) pieces of no precise weight and a variety of sizes. Axe
heads, rings, cast bronze shells, rods,
bars, and ingots, for example, traded alongside aes rude. All bronze
objects
were suitable for trade by their weight and were frequently broken to adjust their weight and to make change.
Despite its great advantages, it was not until the
middle of the 5th century B.C. that bronze replaced cattle as the
primary measure of value in Roman trade. The Roman Lex Aternia et Tarpeia (c. 454 B.C.) a.k.a. "Tarpeian Law" replaced livestock as 'money' with copper, defined as weight of metal per ox (cattle). The Republican law stated oxen were to be valued at 100 libra (pounds) of copper each and sheep at 10 libra.
Used with permission from Ancient Nomos - https://twitter.com/ANAMCurator.
During the 4th century B.C., smelted bronze bullion was cast into regular molds of different shapes with pre-determined weights. Examples include the "round cake" aes formatum pieces depicted above. The aes formatum specimens are generally cast without any type of inscription or images. Bricks, bars, rods, and ingots were also cast. All these aes formatum types were still valued by weight and frequently cut or broken to make change.
At the beginning of the 3rd century B.C., aes signatum, a new form of Roman money, appeared. Aes signatum consists of heavy oblong, quadrilateral or brick-shaped cast pieces of bronze, with depictions of animals (e.g. birds, elephants, oxen, pigs and dolphins), Pegasus, corn-ears, a caduceus, or a sword and sheath. Their weight averages approximately 1350 grams. Aes rude and aes formatum remained in use, by weight, for some time after the introduction of the aes signatum, since specimens have been found together.
Although bronze traded by weight was the official measure of value for only for Rome and central Italy and perhaps only from the about the middle of the 5th to the 3rd century B.C., bronze was a trade good
and a medium of exchange both earlier and later and across much of the
ancient world. Italian aes rude has been found in hoards alongside aes
formatum, aes signatum, Celtic ring money, all sorts of bronze objects, and coins as well, as far from Italy as Spain and Croatia.
Bertol, A. & K Farac. "Aes rude and aes formatum – a new typology" in VAMZ, 3. s., XLV (2012). PDF available online
Fallani, G. "Rilievi ed osservazioni su alcune monete della ser dell' Aes Grave" in IAPN 8 (Wetteren, 1986), pp. 31- 40, pl. 6-7.
Garrucci, R. Le monete dell 'Italia antica. (Rome, 1885). Available online
Grueber, H. Coins of the Roman Republic in The British Museum, Vol. 1. Aes rude, aes signatum, aes grave, and coinage of Rome from BC 268. (London, 1910). PDF Available
Online
Haeberlin, E. Aes Grave. Das Schwergeld Roms und Mittelitaliens. (Frankfurt, 1910). Available online
Sear, D. Roman Coins and Their Values, Volume I: Republic to the Flavians. (London, 2000).
Thurlow, B. & I. Vecchi. Italian Cast Coinage. (Dorchester, 1979).
Vecchi, I. Italian aes rude, signatum and the aes grave of Sicily in Thurlow–Vecchi, Italian Cast Coinage. (Dorchester, 1979).
Vecchi, I. Italian Cast Coinage. (London, 2013).
Used with permission from Ancient Nomos
http://ancientnomosart.org/exhibits/roman-aes-formatum-bronze-ingot/
Aes Formatum copper round cake ingot
Obv: Truncated conical-shaped, round type molded casting.
Rev: Planar surface and blank.
Welcome to the dawn of ancient Roman coinage and cast bronze as bullion! The ancient cast bronze ingot above represents a very early example of Roman metal bullion first used as a medium for exchange by the burgeoning Republican Roman culture. Known today as “aes formatum” (formed bronze), these earliest of very large cast ingots, like coins, had both intrinsic, bullion and monetary value. The term aes formatum was first mentioned in the major study and 1910 publication of ancient Roman cast bronze coinage titled, Das Schwergeld Rom und Mittelitaliens, by Ernst Haeberlin, (see plate 2, images 7-8). In his major ancient Roman bronze study, the numismatist coined the Latin term aes formatum to describe the earliest formed-shape cast copper and bronze trade ingots. The Haeberlin aes formatum specimens can be seen on plates 3 and 4, and are identified as round “cakes”, bars, ax heads and even pieces of round castings that are broken.
The economic trade of a pure metal bullion object in the form of this very heavy bronze ingot, circa 4th century BC, came late to Roman culture and marks a very remarkable cultural accomplishment for the Republican Roman society. Early Republican society was essentially agricultural where barter and trade of products functioned as the primary medium of exchange among its citizens and neighbors. As the Republic expanded, the agricultural subsistence based economy alone was becoming unsustainable. Coincidentally, regional copper ore deposits were readily available in central Italy and had already been in extensive use by the Etruscan neighbors to the north. It is during this agrarian era that the Romans learned for the first time how bronze bullion could come to represent an “exchangeable” object of value, both economically and literally. Romans quickly learned bullion ingots could be traded, hoarded, stored, consumed, recycled, redistributed or used in a Pagan sacrifice. The use of bronze as bullion, permitted Romans to specialize, expand and provide purchasing power for citizens, soldiers and tradesmen, which could hold long term value well into the future. Many diverse forms, shapes and styles soon emerged for a wide range of various practical, symbolic, religious, economic or ideological ends. In addition, as Roman society expanded, knowledge of copper mining, smelting and mixing with tin to make bronze soon became integral to the burgeoning society.
The Roman knowledge and industry quickly incorporated the use of sophisticated technologies to mine ores including many different types of elemental deposits such as lead, silver and gold, in addition to copper and tin. The need for copper and copper products increased greatly after Pyrrhus of Epirus returned to Greece, circa 280 BC. After defeating the Greeks, the Romans controlled central and south Italy and within a century, would become the largest miners, refiners and producers of copper products in the Mediterranean. Virtually all early Republican bronze metalwork is characterized by practicality and simplicity of design which is emblematic of the ancient Roman metal casting methods and technology. It is these characteristically Roman conditions of pragmatism and austerity that give the early Republican coinage the seemingly crude mightiness and design simplification that display bold, powerful and perhaps somewhat “primitive” appearance.
During the 4th century BC and before Romans created coins, a progression or chronology of three basic cast bronze bullion types evolved. This is when the earliest copper and bronze bullion artifacts emerged as a means of exchange. The first type of smelted bronze bullion metal was cast by Romans into rough lumps of bronze known as “aes rude” (rough bronze) pieces of no precise weights and a variety of sizes. The second type of smelted bronze bullion was cast into regular molds of different shapes, but with precise weights. These are the aes formatum pieces like the specimen depicted above. The aes formatum specimens are generally cast without any type of inscription or images. Lastly, they were smelted and cast into rectangular bars of precise weights, but were cast with device inscriptions and or images. The latter cast ingots are known as “aes signatum” pieces. All three types of early bronze bullion objects, from an elemental point of view, are precious pieces of ‘heavy metal’ that have an intrinsic value because of their copper and tin content.
The archaeological evidence for this early Roman aes formatum bronze ingot as a mining smelting product and as a trade commodity is becoming more and more apparent through the number of ancient Roman sites and finds. Sites where the aes formatum bronze ingots have been discovered range from central Italy including, Aria, Cervetari, Cere, Etruria and in Porto Torres on the island of Sardinia. Sardinia is especially known by archaeologists to have had a highly developed bronze metalworking industry as is evident from many site finds of ingots, molds and bronze artifacts. Many of these bronze ingot find sites are recorded and referred to as in the: Garrucci 1885, Bahrfeld 1901, Willers 1905 and Haeberlin 1910. Similar aes formatum bronze ingots have also been discovered in Europe including, Gračac, Mazin, Štikada and Vrankamen, and also as far away as North Africa, Spain, Britain and the Near East, including China. The vast extent and wide range of aes formatum finds clearly demonstrates the importance, high value and long distances that interconnected the ancient Roman bronze trade beyond the Mediterranean. This wide range of bronze ingot finds throughout Mediterranean Europe directly coincides with the Republican Roman growth and expansion of trade and commerce during the late Bronze Age.
From an economic standpoint, the aes formatum bronze ingot above represents a critical transition stage of Roman currency. The ingot is a tangible artifact that links the mode of production, beginning with the ancient mining and smelting metalworkers, with the regional Republican era distribution corridors ultimately connected to the bronze consumers. While the ancient aes formatum bronze ingots come in a variety of shapes and sizes, the specimen above is a truncated conical-shaped ingot and is a unique variation of the usual round plano-convex discoid type. Many ancient Roman copper mining sites include the remains of blast furnace pits (ovens) offering valuable clues to the heating processes used to separate copper from the mined ores. During the heating process (smelting), copper mats formed at the bottom of the furnace pits. The raw copper was then reheated to a liquid and combined with approximately 10% tin to create the alloy bronze. The bronze was then cast into convenient size aes formatum ingots, stackable in sacks for transport and distribution. The finished aes formatum ingots generally had a weight ranging from one to two kilograms, though larger examples have been discovered. The raised surface is usually convex or conical, which was the surface in contact with the ground or bottom of the mold receiving the molten bronze. The flat surface of the aes formatum ingot was the area that was exposed to air while the molten bronze was cooling. In cross section, they are thickest at or near the center, then slope gradually towards the edges.
DOCUMENTATION
Value: 5 Asses (63 Unciae).
Metal: Ć cast bronze.
Weight: 1750 grams. Original (heavy) libral standard.
Dated: 5th-4th century BC.
Attribution: Italo Vecchi. Italian Cast Coinage. London. 2013, page 84; Haeberlin, Aes Grave; Das Schwergeld Rom und Mittelitaliens, plate 2, #7-8; Lex Aternia-Tarpeia Libra from A. Gaius, Institutes, Book I, 122 (premonetale) Ex. Kent Ponterio Collection, Roman Republic RSSS, #38375; Harlan Berk Aes Formatum Inventory, 2000.
Used with permission from Ancient Nomos
http://ancientnomosart.org/exhibits/roman-aes-formatum-ingot/
Forum Note: Very similar cast bronze shells are also found in Spain; most of these have hollow backs. Lead weights are also cast from shells in Italy and other Mediterranean areas.
Garrucci, R. Le monete dell 'Italia antica. (Rome, 1885). Available online
Garrucci, pl. 6
3. Copper or bronze bar fragment, Palestrina (37 km east-southeast of Rome)
4. Copper or bronze bar fragment, Vicarello, Tuscany
5. Copper or bronze bar fragment, Todi, Perugia, Umbria
6. Copper or bronze bar fragment, Palestrina (37 km east-southeast of Rome)
7. Copper or bronze bar, Palestrina (37 km east-southeast of Rome)
8. Copper or bronze bar, Albano (25 km southeast of Rome)
11. Copper round cake, Ossi, Sardinia
12. Copper or bronze brick, Sculca, Sardinia
15. Copper or bronze disc fragment, Vicarello, Livorno
16. Copper or bronze brick(?) fragment, Palestrina (23 miles east-southeast of Rome)
17. Copper or bronze brick fragment, Vicarello, Livorno
18. Copper or bronze brick fragment
19. Copper or bronze brick fragment, Vicarello, Livorno
20. Copper or bronze brick fragment
21. Copper or bronze brick fragment
22. Copper or bronze brick fragment, Vicarello, Livorno
Grueber, H. Coins of the Roman Republic in The British Museum, Vol. 1. Aes rude, aes signatum, aes grave, and coinage of Rome from BC 268. (London, 1910).
Grueber does not use the term aes formatum in Coins of the Roman Republic in The British Museum, but does describe the trade in metal and discusses some examples of aes formatum as "intermediate between the as rude and the aes signatum":
The earliest form of exchange in metal employed by the Romans consisted of amorphous lumps of bronze of no fixed weight, and without any official stamp or mark of value. Hence they received the name of aes rude (Festus, de Verb, sig., s.v. rodus) or aes infectum. When used for currency or exchange these lumps of metal must have passed by weight. A number were discovered in 1828 near Vulci together with some quadrilateral coins, called aes signatum (see BMCRR I p. 3). Many of the latter were broken, the larger pieces weighing from two to three pounds, others being equal to various divisions of the pound, whilst the greater number weighed about two ounces, thus corresponding to the sextans (see BMCRR I p. 9). Somewhat later there was another find of this aes rude at Vicarello, with which were many examples of the aes signatum, of the aes grave (see BMCRR I p. 5), and of Romano-Campanian coins (see Babelon, Mon. de la Republique romaine, vol. i., p. 10 f.). Barron D 'Ailly (Recherches sur lamon. rom., p. 10), through whose hands many examples passed, give their maximum weight at about 707.2 gram. (=10913.7 grs.), and their minimum at 2.21 gram. (34.1 grs.).