Page:Origin of metallic currency and weight standards.djvu/211

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

CHAPTER IX.

Statement and Criticism of the Old Doctrines.

                  Nec Babylonios
Tentaris numeros.

Hor. Carm. I. 11. 2.

We now proceed to the statement and criticism of the old doctrines of the origin of metallic currency and weight standards. To enter into an elaborate account of the various shades of doctrine held by the followers of Boeckh would be useless and wearisome, for as they all alike are agreed in starting from an arbitrary scientifically obtained unit, it matters not as far as my object is concerned. Certain metrologists lay down that Egypt borrowed her system from Babylon, whilst others[1] again declare that Egypt is the true mother of weight standards, and this battle is raging hotly at the present moment. Thus but recently Professor Brugsch has written a vigorous article (in the Zeitschrift für Ethnologie[2]) to prove that the Chaldeans borrowed their system from Egypt. But the Assyriologists were not prepared to assent to a doctrine which placed the Babylonians in an inferior position. Accordingly Dr C. F. Lehmann (Zeitschrift fur Ethnologie, 1889, p. 245 seqq.) has made an elaborate defence of the original doctrine first propounded by Boeckh and developed and expounded by Dr Brandis and Dr Hultsch. This Assyrio-Egyptian struggle for pre-eminence has at present no importance for our enquiry, as it is based almost entirely on à

  1. Nissen, "Griechische und römische Metrologie" (Iwan Müller's Handbuch der classischen Alterthumswissenschaft I. 663 seq. or separately, Nordlingen, 1886).
  2. "Das älteste Gewicht," 1889, pp. 1-9, 34-43.