Silver
denarius showing Juno
Moneta
Rome, 46 BC
The origins of the word
'money'
The origins of the modern English words
'money' and 'mint' lie in ancient
Rome. In the period of the Roman Republic, from about 300 BC
onwards, coins were made near the temple of the goddess
Juno
Moneta. It was located on the Capitol (the modern Campidoglio), the
citadel of Rome. The goddess's name, Moneta
('Warner' or 'Reminder') eventually
came to refer to the place where the coins were made, the
'mint', and to its product,
'money', both of which derive ultimately from the
Latin word
moneta.
This
coin shows an image of Juno Moneta on the front; her name is
written vertically on the left. On the back of the coin are
depicted tools associated with metalworking: in the centre an
anvil, on the left a pair of tongs and on the right a hammer. Above
the anvil is an uncertain object decorated with a wreath. It may be
the smith's cap worn by
Vulcan,
the Roman god of fire and metalworking. Alternatively, the tools
shown may be those of an ancient Roman coin-maker, if we interpret
the 'cap' as an upper
die
about to be struck by the hammer onto a
blank
held by the tongs. The coin was made by the moneyer Titus
Carisius.
M.H. Crawford, Roman republican coinage (Cambridge University Press, 1974)
A.M. Burnett, Coinage in the Roman world (London, Seaby, 1987)