返回总目录
"Dirham" In The Time Of Joseph?


"Dirham" In The Time Of Joseph?
M S M Saifullah, ʿAbdullah David & Muhammad
Ghoniem
© Islamic Awareness, All Rights Reserved.
First Composed: 25th February 2006
Last Updated: 7th April 2006
Assalamu-ʿalaykum wa rahamatullahi wa barakatuhu:
1. Introduction
And then sold him [Joseph] for a small price, for a few
pieces of silver [darāhima maʿdūdatin]; so little did
they value him. [Qur'an 12:20]
In the story of Yusuf (Joseph) in the Qur'an, the brothers of Joseph, in order
to get rid of him, dropped Joseph into a well. However, Joseph was picked up
by some travellers who came by. They hid Joseph like a piece of merchandise
and sold him for a small price in Egypt. The Qur'an describes this transaction
as darāhima maʿdūdatin. However, according to the Christian
missionary Joseph Smith, the use of dirham during the time of Joseph,
as narrated in the Qur'an, is an anachronism.
In June 2005, as part of a series of conferences and workshops delivered to
the evangelical European Leadership Forum in Sopron, Hungary, Smith along with
fellow missionaries Keith Small and Andy Bannister as well as others, were responsible
for cascading current methods, tactics and strategies for evangelizing Muslims
at an international level. In one such lecture delivered to his fellow missionaries
from various European countries, Smith discussed several alleged "exciting"
errors in the Qur'an. Smith told his audience that the mention of the dirham
in the story of Joseph in the Qur'an indicates that the Qur'an was being redacted
long after it was finally revealed (according to the Muslims). He says
[his statement is at time slice 30:4832:58]:
... some of these are just exciting to use and you can
just really play with your Muslims who bring these up or you can just take
them to them and just question them and then say come back next week and come
in with the answers. They're good to do that, because for many Muslims they
have no idea that these problems exist in the Qur'an, and the paper we're
gonna give you that's gonna be on the internet I've got about 30 or 40 of
these errors up there you can pull them down, these are at least 10 that I
have here that are the easiest ones to use.
Let me just give you an example of the dirham, the dirham,
and this will move right into what Keith's gonna be saying later and that
is the story of Joseph again which is that complete story that we're looking
at when Joseph was sold to the Egyptians he was sold for a few dirham counted
out. And you ask about dirham counted out you assume therefore you're using
coins. You count out coins. You ask well did
they have coins at the time of Joseph? There were no coins. You come
to the British museum we have a tour there of looking at all the biblical
evidence, two hours looking at all the biblical evidence, the archaeological
evidence, the Old Testament, from the Assyrian, the Babylonian and the Persian
period, and we can show you in the coin, in the numismatic section where there
are dirhams, but the fascinating thing is there are no coins prior to the
seventh century BC. Coins didn't exist, it was bullion, it was weighted measure.
Well, the Bible also makes the claim in Genesis, where do we have it here,
Genesis 37:28 that Joseph was sold for 20 shekels. Shekels is not a coin it's
a bullion. In fact we now know from the Mneusic(?) tablets that's about a
price of a slave around that time period. So not only does the Bible get the
right denomination, it also gets the right currency.
Lets go back to the dirham. Well maybe God was giving
a revelation to Muhammad at the time and using a currency that they would
have known at that time, so maybe the people who were living there in the
seventh century AD used dirham's. Did they? No they didn't. The dirham was
only created in 642. Umar(?) was the one that he introduced the dirham to
replace the drachma. But Muhammad died in 632. So
how could Muhammad have received a revelation using a coin that was yet to
exist for another ten years? You got a problem
don't you? It as if I were to ask you if I could buy that watch back in 1960
for 20 euros. You wouldn't know what I was talking back in 1960. Today you
would but not in 1960. And here you got a difficulty. And immediately you
can see what's going on. It looks like that this was a something that was
put into the Qur'an much later.
Smith's argument can be summarized like this. Firstly, Joseph was sold to the
Egyptians for a few dirhams, counted out. According to Smith, only coins
are counted, and, there were no coins in the time of Joseph, it was bullion.
Secondly, dirham was created only after the advent of Islam and it was
ʿUmar (d. 644 CE) who introduced the dirham to replace the
drachma. Therefore, Prophet Muhammad (d. 632 CE) used the name
of coin which did not exist for another ten years. In other words, the use of
dirham in the Qur'anic account of Joseph is an anachronism.
Are Smith's analyses, assumptions and conclusions based on a sound understanding
of the numismatic history of the ancient near east? In this paper, we would
like to examine the claims of Smith concerning the dirham from the point
of view of history and philology. We will also discuss the sale of Joseph in
Egypt from the point of view of Egyptology to see if the ancient Egyptians did
indeed use some form of silver for their transactions.
2. Dirham: A Historical & Philological
Investigation
A discussion about ancient coinage involves some technical terms. Therefore,
let us identify some key definitions. Firstly, the coin. Concerning the "coin"
the Key Definitions In Numismatics says:
Coin: Piece of metal, marked with a device,
issued by government authority and intended for use as money.[1]
The Seaby Coin Encyclopaedia defines "bullion"
as:
Bullion: Uncoined metal, usually of gold
and silver, in the shape of bars, plates, ingots or other regular forms.[2]
Armed with this information, let us discuss the issues surrounding
the dirham, shekel and "coinage" in ancient Egypt.
HISTORICAL
INVESTIGATION
Smith has claimed that the dirham was introduced after the advent of
Muhammad and that it was not created until the time of ʿUmar. This is simply
factually incorrect. The pre-Islamic romance poetry of ʿAntara mentions
the word dirham.
 |
| |
|
19. Or her mouth is as an ungrazed meadow,
whose herbage the rain has guaranteed, in which there is but little dung;
and which is not marked with the feet of animals.
20. Or as if it is an old wine-skin,
from Azriat, preserved long, such as the kings of Rome preserve;
21. The first pure showers of every
rain-cloud rained upon it, and left every puddle in it
like a dirham;
22. Sprinkling and pouring; so that
the water flows upon it every evening, and is not cut off from it.[3]
|
Commenting on the presence of the word dirham in ʿAntara's poetry
Arthur Jeffery says:
It was doubtless an early borrowing from the Mesopotamian
area...[4]
It is clear that the pre-Islamic Arabs were aware of the dirham. The
history of the dirham can be traced back to the Athenian (or Greek) coin
drachm. Athenian coins circulated widely in the Eastern Mediterranean
in the 5th and 4th century BCE. These Athenian coins, once established as the
recognised and universal currency, soon became an object of imitation by the
people among them whom they had from long use grown familiar. The imitation
of Athenian coin types, especially drahm, in Southern Arabia, goes back
as early as c. 400 BCE.[5] The Athenian
imitation coins were also found in the northern Arabia Felix.[6]
Athenian coinage also gave rise to a number of imitative series in Eastern Arabia
as well. Excavations at Thaj, Dhahran, al-Khobar, al-Hofuf, al-Qatif, Ayn Jawan,
al-Sha'ba, Jabal Kenzan, ed-Dur and Mleiha have yielded lots of coins with many
of them being imitation drachms and tetradrachms.[7]
Not surprisingly, all the coinage found in these excavations shows the influence
of the issues of Alexander the Great.[8] The
drachm in Persia was passed on to the Parthian
Empire (150 BCE - 226 CE) by the Greek Seleucid
Empire (330 BCE - 150 BCE) and when the Sassanid
Empire (226 CE - 650 CE) took over Persia, the drachm was known as
drahm in the Middle Persian.
The pre-Islamic Arabs were either Persian subjects (in Mesopotamia) or allies
(in Arabia). They also handled Persian currency and had a word for it
dirham. The Persian drahm was called dirham in Arabic;[9]
and in the former it also meant a silver coin or money.[10]
The silver drahm was the main currency of Sassanian Persia. The Encyclopædia
Iranica says concerning the dirham.
DIRHAM
(< Gk. drakhmé "drachma"; Mid. Pers. drahm,
Pers. derham), a unit of silver
coinage and of weight...
I. In Pre-Islamic Persia
The dirham retained a stable value of about 4 g throughout
the entire pre-Islamic period...
II. In the Islamic Period
For Muslims in the classical period, any
silver coin was a dirham, and a dirham was also a monetary unit that
might or might not be represented by a circulating coin. A dirham
was also a small weight unit, usually not the same as the weight of
a monetary dirham...[11]
Similarly the Encyclopaedia Of Islam says about
dirham:
DIRHAM.
I. The name
of a weight derived from Greek dracmn...
II. The silver unit of Arab monetary
system from the rise of Islam down to Mongol period.[12]
It is not surprising that the Islamic dirham was a logical outgrowth
of the Sassanian drahm. The new denomination's very name was an adaptation
of drahm, the name for the Sassanian silver piece. Not surprisingly,
the Sassanian coinage and the Arab-Sassanian coinage during the advent of Islam
were closely related.[13] The earliest Arab-Sassanian
coins were struck in 651/2 CE, the year of Yezdegird III's final defeat. The Arab-Sassanian
dirhams were close imitations of Yezdegird's issues and were appropriately
dated to his 20th regnal year, only adding that they were struck "in the
name of Allah".[14] Like the drahm,
the dirham was flat and very thin, measuring about 29 mm in diameter
and weighing 2.9 - 3.0 gms.[15] Its weight
suggested a lowering of standards from the Sassanian drahm which weighed
about 4 gms. How does the dirham compare with Smith's highly proclaimed
shekel? Concerning the shekel, The Universal
Jewish Encyclopedia says:
Shekel, a weight
and later a coin, which served as a standard value among the ancient
Israelites and Jews. It was apparently based on a standard similar to that
of the Babylonians who, as the principal trading people of the ancient Orient,
impressed their own standards of currency upon the neighboring nations.[16]
Clearly, both the dirham and the shekel were used as weights
and coins. However, the similarities between them end here. The dirham
represented any silver coin. It could also
be a monetary unit that might or might not be represented by a coin. Resultantly,
one must exercise caution when discussing the dirham as it is a word
with a multiplicity of meanings.
PHILOLOGICAL
INVESTIGATION
It has been recognized by both Muslim and non-Muslim philologists that the
word dirham is of non-Arabic origin. For example, al-Jawālīqī
(d. 1145 CE / 539 AH) states in his Al-Muʿarrab:

And dirham is an arabized form. In the past, the
Arabs have used it in their speech. They did not know any other (currency);
they ascribed it to Hijra`. The poet said:
In all the markets of Iraq (he takes) a tribute, and
in everything sold by any individual (he imposes) a one dirham.[17]
Similarly, al-Khafājī says concerning dirham:

(Dirham) Arabized form of daram.[18]
Jeffery says the ultimate origin of the word dirham is from the Greek
drakhmé.[19] However, it is not
clear how this word passed into the Persian before entering the Arabic vocabulary
in pre-Islamic times. It is interesting to note that the Greek drakhmé
originally meant "handful",[20] then
it was a weight and finally a coin.[21]
SUMMARY
From our discussion, there are three conclusions that can be drawn concerning
the dirham.
- It was known among pre-Islamic Arabs and the Arabic word dirham came
from the Persian drahm.
- During the advent of Islam, any silver coin was a dirham and it was
also a monetary unit that might or might not be represented by a circulating
coin.
- It was a unit of weight and coinage.
Given these facts, it is clear that Smith's arguments concerning the first
appearance of dirham during the time of ʿUmar and that dirham
being just a "coin" are conclusively refuted. Let us now turn our
attention to the phrase darāhima maʿdūdatin, i.e., a few
pieces of silver, countable. The Hans-Wehr Dictionary
Of Modern Written Arabic defines maʿdūd as
madūd: countable, numerable,
calculable; limited in number, little, few, a few, some.[22]
Smith's contention here is that only coins are counted and that there were
no coins in the time of Joseph it was bullion that was used for transaction.
He then cites from the book of Genesis that Joseph was sold for 20 shekels.
If indeed coins were counted and not bullion, it is surprising to see that Smith
contradicts himself by claiming that the sale of Joseph fetched the value of
20 shekels, clearly an amount which was counted. Such egregious errors
are not uncommon to Smith. Perhaps he is not aware of that fact that bullions
had standardised weights
which enabled them to be counted. Otherwise currency would not have existed.
One would have to barter (and even this would involve some counting!). Any mention
of a currency that is not countable is an oxymoron or a contradiction. It is
like saying we are speaking a language that cannot be communicated. By definition,
a language is communicable, and in similar vein, by definition, any currency
system based on weight or paper is countable.
The word maʿdūd suggests a small amount of metal exchanged
hands, which was countable. How true is that statement from the point of view
of ancient Egypt? In order to understand how trade was carried out in ancient
Egypt, let us now turn our attention to how metal was used in transactions in
ancient Egypt.
3. Precious Metals As A Means Of Trade
In Ancient Egypt
In this section we would like to establish certain facts such as the use of
precious metals in ancient Egypt, the weights and measures used to quantify
the Egyptian monetary system and the evidence for an early "coinage"
system in ancient Egypt. This will clearly establish the role of precious metals,
and silver in particular, as an important part of business transactions in ancient
Egypt. The manner in which precious metals were used will be discussed and then
compared with the Qur'anic phrase darāhima maʿdūdatin
(i.e., a few pieces of silver, countable) used in the selling of Joseph in Egypt.
Finally, the sale of Joseph as mentioned in the Bible and the Qur'an would be
compared and contrasted, highlighting the problems with missionary polemics.
PRECIOUS
METALS AS A MEANS OF EXCHANGE
Although there is considerable evidence of an early type of "coinage",
it is generally held by scholars that coins were unknown in ancient Egypt before
the 26th Dynasty (c. 685 525 BCE).[23]
Therefore, the prices of commodities had to be expressed in another way. All
forms of commerce in ancient Egypt took place in the form of barter, while the
value of the commodities exchanged was sometimes also expressed in quantities
of copper, silver or gold. While such a barter system certainly existed at the
local level it should be considered as part of a larger system in which precious
metal was employed as a form of currency. The famous Abydos inscription refers
to the traders belonging to the temple and their trade involved precious metals.
The inscription reads:
I have given you a ship carrying cargoes upon the Great
Green (sea), bring in for you the great [marvels] of God's Land; merchants
plying their trade, executing their orders, their
revenues therefrom being in gold, silver and copper.[24]
Similarly, Papyrus Lansing from the New Kingdom Period, extolling the
life of the scribe compares the scribal profession with others. It says:
The merchants fare downstream and upstream and are as
busy as brass, carrying wares <from> one town to another and supplying
him that has not, although the tax-people carry
gold, the most precious of all minerals.[25]
The scribe here attempted to show the toil of the traders by contrasting the
relative values of the metals in which they are said to deal. Since the composition
is dedicated to the advantages of the scribal profession, it is simply pointing
to the contrast between merchants and tax-collectors, suggesting that the tax
people obtained the gold from hard-working merchants.
Another piece of evidence showing that the precious metals such as silver were
used in transactions comes from Papyrus BM 10052, again from the New
Kingdom Period. Here a legal defence is offered by a woman who was being questioned
in connection with silver stolen from tombs. When asked to explain the source
of silver in her possession, she explains:
... I got it [i.e., silver]
in exchange for barley in the year of hyenas when there was a famine.[26]
WEIGHTS
AND MEASURES USED IN PRECIOUS METAL TRANSACTIONS
With regard to precious metal transactions in ancient Egypt, there were different
systems available, the one most frequently used being the comparison of the
value of a commodity with a certain weight of copper or silver, and very rarely
of gold. This weight was called deben (dbn) [Figure 1] and its
tenth part was known as kite (kdt) [Figure 2];[27]
the latter was apparently not used with copper.[28]
The deben was 13 gms during the Old Kingdom, its weight was increased
to 91 gms during the Middle Kingdom. In the New Kingdom Period, the deben
was divided into 10 kite of 9.1 gms each, with lesser weight expressed
as fraction of a kite.[29] Thus it provided
a system of 'prices' for use in barter and trade. Weigall has shown evidence
of an Old Kingdom writing of the word deben in the context of weights
where it was written with a circular determinative.[30]
In at least one instance this is more specifically depicted as an open ring.

Figure 1: Hieroglyph writing of "deben"
(dbn).[31]

Figure 2: Hieroglyph writing of "kite"
(kdt).[32]

Figure 3: Hieroglyph writing of "shaty"
(shty).[33]
The second way of expressing prices is by comparison of the value of a commodity
with an object of silver which was variously
called shat (sht) / shenat (shnt)
/ shaty (shty) / seniu (sniw)
in ancient Egypt[34]
[see Figure 3 for shaty (shty)]. This unit
of value has been the subject of extensive discussion among egyptologists. The
most accepted view among egyptologists is that of Peet who translated this word
as "piece", although he thought that "ring" was the original
meaning.[35] T. G.
H. James preferred the even more neutral translation "unit".[36]
Černý who studied the value of the "piece" (i.e., shty)
was able to prove[37]
a previously held view of Gardiner[38]
that the shty weighed 1/12 of a deben.
The relative value of metals were also available in ancient Egypt in terms
of deben and shty. The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus
from the time of Hyksos of the Second Intermediate Period (c. 1674
1553 BCE) is one such example.[39]
The papyrus has 84 problems with worked examples and one particular example
deals with the issue of relative values of gold, silver and lead in terms of
deben and shty.
Example of reckoning a bag containing precious metals.
If it is said to thee, a bag in which are gold, silver and lead. This bag
is bought for 84 shty; what is assignable to each precious
metal?
Now what is given for a deben of gold is 12 shty,
for silver 6 shty and for a deben of lead 3 shty.
You are to add together that which is given for a deben of each precious
metal: result 21. You are to reckon with this 21 to find 84 shty,
for that is what has been bought in this bag. It comes to 4, which you assign
to each metal.[40]
The question now arises. Are deben and shty examples
of the "coinage" in ancient Egypt? This we will discuss in the next
section.
DEBEN
AND SHTY (OR SHT): EVIDENCE OF "COINAGE"
IN ANCIENT EGYPT?
It was stated earlier that coins were unknown in ancient Egypt before the 26th
Dynasty. However, there is sufficient evidence to suggest that Egypt had some
kind of coinage right down to the Old Kingdom Period (c. 2700
2200 BCE). Let us now examine the evidence in chronological order.

Figure 4: Marketing scene in the tomb of
Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep at Saqqara (5th Dynasty, Old Kingdom Period).[41]
Perhaps the most informative scene concerning sht occurs
in a tomb belonging to Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep at Saqqara (Figure 4). Niankhkhnum
and Khnumhotep were two senior officials who lived in the mid-5th Dynasty of
Old Kingdom Period. The scene in their tomb shows a busy open-air market with
traders offering a wide variety of goods. There are at least four different
vegetable and fruit stalls, two display fish, a woman trader selling vessels
and two salesmen standing next to a pitch displaying the cloth. It is the last
scene which is of interest to us. Here the two salesmen holding out the cloth,
presumably linen make a bargain (row 4, right hand side):
... cubits of cloth in exchange of 6 sht.[42]
The transaction values a particular length of the cloth at 6 sht
whereas all other transaction in the tomb of Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep are
straightforward barters. It is interesting to note that the buyer is not shown
with any reciprocal object which he can trade against the cloth; but he is given
the price of the cloth against sht. The same standard of
value also appears in other Old Kingdom texts. The "House-Purchase Document"
from Giza uses sht to determine the value of cloth and furniture.
Here the house costs 10 sht; in exchange a four-ply cloth
is given for 3 sht, a two-ply cloth for 3 sht
and a bed for 4 sht.[43]
There is also some evidence of a copper coinage. The Hekanakhte Papyri from
the 11th Dynasty[44]
of the Middle Kingdom Period (c. 2040 1991 BCE) gives evidence
of copper deben used for coinage. Hekanakhte, a farmer, sent the letter
to his agent saying:
Now see! I have sent you by Sihathor
24 copper debens for the renting of land.[45]
Strangely enough, Baer translated this as "24 deben of copper".[46]
James says that the "letter says quite clearly '24 copper debens',
not '24 debens of copper', which ought to signify 24 pieces of copper
each weighing one deben."[47]
It may be emphasized that the reference is made only to the number of debens,
clearly suggesting that they were of a standard metal quality as well as of
a standard weight.
Papyrus Boulaq 11, first published by A. Mariette,[48]
republished by Weill[49]
and then Peet,[50]
dated to 18th Dynasty of the New Kingdom Period (c. 1570 1293
BCE), is even more interesting. The majority of the transactions in this papyrus
appear to be debits entered against the names of various traders, but there
is one transaction that clearly shows a trader paying for his purchase with
gold sht.
6. Second month of Inundation, day 25, received from
the trader Baki
7. gold 2½ sht in payment
for meat.[51]
Interestingly, this is the only known instance where a gold sht
was used instead of the usual silver. Acknowledging that this transaction involves
payment in gold, James had argued from silence of the entries where commodities
are valued in terms of their equivalent in metal that "we should not conclude
that the payments were actually made in metal as specified. If they were so
made, it would suggest that metals, in particular gold and silver, were commonly
used as currency' in the truest sense; from which it should follow that substantial
quantities of these metals were in circulation, available for trading, and regularly
passed from hand to hand."[52]
In the light of Papyrus Boulaq 11, where a trader specifically pays in
gold and where commodities are valued in terms of sht of
gold, there is no reason to exclude the use of gold in commercial exchanges.
It is likely that this trade happened in the upper levels of the ancient Egyptian
society. We have already seen the famous Abydos inscription refers to traders
dealing in gold, silver and copper.
The early 18th Dynasty stela of Ahmose-Nefertari from Karnak mentions the transfer
of 1010 sht in the form of gold, silver, copper, grain and
land.
List therefore
Gold: 160, silver: 250, copper: ....
Total: 1010 sht
I have given to her a male and female servant, x amount
of grain, 5 arouras of land in Lower Egypt as the 1010 sht
though her office was (only) 600 sht.[53]
The Rekhmire's inscription from the 18th Dynasty of the New Kingdom Period
is also worth mentioning. An examination of the tax record on this inscription
shows that while the amount of gold paid as tax on offices range from about
5 to 6 deben, the commandant of the fortress of Elephantine pays no less
than 40 deben and the commandant of the fortress of Bigeh paid 20 deben.
On the other hand, the mayor of Edfu paid 8 deben of gold as tax.[54]
It appears that the officials from southern frontier were in a good position
to obtain gold.
Papyrus Turin 1881 from the New Kingdom Period is an interesting case.
It concerns gold, silver and copper provided by a temple for the rations of
the Necropolis. In ancient Egypt it was common for commodities to be valued
in terms of metal for barter. In this papyrus, however, the metals are valued
in equivalents of khar of grain.
Receipt of the ḥd from the deputy
Minkhau of the temple of Isis for the rations of the Necropolis: good gold
1 kite, equivalent to 5 khars (of corn); silver 4 kite,
equivalent to 6 khar; a kerchief, equivalent to 2 khar; and
20 deben of copper, equivalent to 5 khar.[55]
The metals along with the garment are classified as ḥd
which apart from its primary meaning of "silver", has also acquired
the general meaning of "payment" for all sorts of commodities.[56]
Commenting on this transaction, Castle says:
In the view of the fact that grain equivalents are given
for quantities of metal, it may well be that the metal was provided for the
purpose of purchasing the usual grain rations from a third party, more likely
a private individual or trader than another temple. On the other hand, the
grain equivalents may indicate the usual amount of grain payments which are
being supplanted by payments in metal for some reason, perhaps on account
of a temporary shortage of grain. In any case, the metal must be seen as a
form of currency.
By itself, the fact that ḥd came
to acquire the extended meaning of "payment" suggests that the exchange
of silver in commercial transactions was or had been a general practice.[57]
Similar conclusions concerning the circulation of precious metals were reached
by Kemp. He says that
... we should accept substantial amount of gold and silver
was always in circulation. This would explain, for example, the gold found
in the First Intermediate Period tombs of the Qau area... It would also explain
how gold and silver featured prominently amongst the commodities used by provincial
towns and districts for paying local taxes to the vizier's office, as depicted
in the tomb of Rekhmira...[58]
If precious metals like gold, silver and copper circulated in ancient Egypt,
what was its form? What did they look like?
SHOW
ME THE MONEY!
It was mentioned earlier that Weigall has shown evidence of an Old Kingdom
writing of the word deben in the context of weights where it was written
with a circular determinative and in at least one instance this is more specifically
depicted as an open ring.[59]
The primary lexical value of deben appears to involve a circular shape,
suggesting that originally in the context of metals deben indicated a
ring,[60] perhaps
of a fixed weight which later became a standard. Weigall's conclusions were
rejected by Peet but the evidence is not that easy to dispose off.[61]
In the context of the Hekanakhte Papyri, it was seen that the farmer proposed
the payment of land using "24 copper deben". In this case it
is clear that the deben is to be understood as a concrete object, not
just a unit of weight. The implications of this are enormous. There exists a
possibility that this means copper rings weighed a deben each. This is
precisely what James had said.
As written this must be translated '24 copper debens',
i.e. 24 pieces of copper, each weighing one deben... It may be inferred,
therefore, that copper was prepared in small ingots or rings of standard weight
for convenience of trade and exchange as early as the XIth Dynasty.[62]
It is interesting to note that the texts that were
discussed do not say that either deben or sht were
weighed or tested for quality. This suggests that both the buyer and
the seller were aware of what a deben or sht meant
and what they represented.
Peet also suggested that sht originally referred to a metal
object rather than to an abstract measure of value.[63]
As mentioned earlier sht appeared to existed alongside with
shn / t, in addition to another writing seniu (sniw).
shn appears with sht as a synonym in
two versions of Spell 129 of the Book of the Dead.[64]
In the Hekanakhte Papyri which were discussed earlier, the writing of sht
appears to have been emended to shnt by the addition of
n. This occurs three times in the document. In one case n is written
inside the sh of sht.[65]
Wente believes that shn of Spell 129 of the Book of the
Dead means "ring" or "seal".[66]
Similarly Černý has noted that sht "occurs
several times in an 18th Dynasty magical text, where it seems to designate the
flat "seal" of a signet ring."[67]
Thus both deben and sht appear to have a shape of
a "ring". Additionally, Castle has pointed out that sht
most likely was derived from sh, "to cut",[68]
and this would refer to its being cut from a parent coil of bar stock.[69]
The evidence from ancient Egypt points to the fact that precious metals were
frequently handled in the convenient form of rings. Representations of gold
and silver in this form appears in the tombs of Rekhmire[70]
and Sobekhotep.[71]
The rings often appear to be open and linked in the form of chains [Figure 5(a)].
Actual finds of treasures from Tell el-Amarna also show that silver was also
handled in this form [Figure 5(b)].[72]

(a)

(b)
Figure 5: (a) A scene from the tomb of
Sobekhotep, a senior treasury official of the reign of Thutmose IV. Africans
bring gold rings and rough nuggets from Nubia.[73]
(b) Silver rings, silver scrap and a crude ingot, a part of a hoard found in
a jar at Tell el-Amarna. The third ring from the left just below the ingot shows
an incised design, perhaps a way to ensure the integrity of the ring.[74]
During the development of coinage, it was necessary to ensure
and secure the integrity of coins from paring of metal. For this reason coins
of precious metals came to be milled along the edge. The application of such
a procedure may not have been possible in the case of metal rings and even if
it did happen, it would have been unsuccessful. This would have certainly resulted
in the metal being weighed in commercial transactions. There appears to be attempts
to protect the integrity of rings in ancient Egypt. Three metal rings in the
Tell el-Amarna hoard were reported to have had incised designs on their ends
[Figure 5(b)].[75]
The integrity of the gold, silver or copper rings (of deben or sht)
would have been difficult to maintain against dishonesty and the need of fractional
values (i.e., kite) must have resulted in much weighing. In other words,
it would have been no longer possible or necessary to maintain the fixed weight
of the rings. The standard was maintained by weighing. Weigall
has shown several inscribed examples of weights from ancient Egypt of this standard.[76]
It appears that the use of metal rings for trade was quite wide-spread.
Metal hoards containing open rings and scrap similar to that from Tell el-Amarna
have been found at Ugarit,[77]
and in one case it was rings and scrap of electrum.[78]
Sollberger has also noted the use of silver rings in Ur III texts and suggested
that "the rings in question would be similar to those helicoidal rings
well-known from North-European tombs of the early Middle Ages. Payments of gifts
could be made by cutting off pieces equivalent to the desired amount."[79]
However, the most dramatic evidence of use of rings for trade
comes from Mesopotamia. Powell has drawn attention to the fact that metals were
traded in Mesopotamia in a form denoted in texts by Sumerian har,
corresponding to Akkadian šewirum (or šemerum, semerum).[80]
He proposes that these words indicate a circular object. They do not simply
mean "ring" in the usual sense, but may refer to a coil of metal,
a convenient form in which metals were handled and used for monetary purposes
[Figure 6]. Castle points out that this corresponds closely to what has been
mentioned about Egyptian deben, as to both etymology and usage.[81]

Figure 6: Silver coils from Mesopotamia
used as "money" for trade.[82]
Powell's suggestion is also supported by Old Akkadian text cited by The
Assyrian Dictionary Of The Oriental Institute Of The University Of Chicago.
semeru: ... paid five (silver) coils, the
price of twenty sheep...[83]
Just like Egyptian deben and sht, the nominal value
of these rings may not correspond exactly to their actual weights as given in
the texts. This is not a cause of difficulty since they would have been weighed
in handling during commercial transactions.[84]
To conclude the discussion with Castle's study on trade in Ramesside times:
... clear that precious metals were handled as both scrap
and in the form of helcoidal rings throughout the fertile crescent, and that
they were used as a form of currency quite early in Mesopotamia, and in
Egypt certainly by the New Kingdom Period, and probably earlier.[85]
WHAT
IS IN THOSE BAGS TIED BEHIND THE SHOULDERS?
Another piece of evidence of early coinage in ancient Egypt, albeit indirect,
often not mentioned, are the market scenes.[86]
Perhaps the most conspicuous feature in the market scenes
is, without doubt, the presence of men carrying small linen bags thrown over
their shoulders, something akin to a purse [Figures 4 and 7]. This feature is
attested in many of the market scenes from the Old Kingdom Period onwards. The
colour of the bag over the shoulder is usually white. The question now is what
could these bags or purses have contained? There is a debate among egyptologists
as to what purpose these bags served.

Figure 7: Mastaba depictions of market
scenes from 4th Dynasty of the Old Kingdom Period showing the traders with small
linen sacks tied behind their shoulders.[87]
It is clear that these bags could not have been used to bring the wares to
the market. Men having the bags thrown over their shoulders are represented
as buyers as well as sellers. Hodjash and Berlev distinguished two types of
scenes: the market scenes where victuals are sold, only the buyers have bags
and the scenes where manufactured goods are sold, the sellers are the ones with
the bags.[88] This
also enables to draw a distinction between those who buy and those who sell.
Hodjash and Berlev are of the opinion that the bag over the shoulders served
as a receptacle to keep the money and valuables in, something like a purse,
even though they doubted if metallic money existed in the ancient Egypt.[89]
Since deben and shty made from precious metals were
used in commercial transactions in ancient Egypt, it would not surprising to
see them handled in small purses.
SELLING
OF JOSEPH IN EGYPT IN THE QUR'AN, TAFSEER AND THE BIBLE
It was mentioned earlier that the Qur'an described the sale of Joseph as darāhima
maʿdūdatin. Al-Zamakhsharī in his al-Kashshāf
says
concerning the phrase darāhima madūdatin:

{sharawhu} They sold him {bithamanin bakhsin}
for less than the due price so obviously [...] {darāhim} that
is, not dinārs {maʿdūdatin} so few they were
countable and were not weighed. Indeed, they would not weigh amounts less
than an uqiyyah which is equal to 40 dirhams and would count
any amount below that (limit). Moreover, small amounts are qualified as maʿdūdah,
since large amounts cannot be (easily) counted. It was narrated on the authority
of Ibn Abbās that: (the price) was 20 dirhams. According
to al-Suddī: It was 22 dirhams. [...]
Similarly, al-Tabari says
in his Tafseer:

The correct stance about this is to say that: Allah Almighty
mentioned that they sold him for a few dirhams, counted not weighed,
without disclosing the exact amount neither in weight nor in count. Neither
did He provide any indication in this regard whether in the Book or in an
account through the Messenger - peace be upon him. The price may be 20 dirhams,
or 22 dirhams, or 40 dirhams. It could be more or less than
that. Whatever that amount was, it was counted not weighed. Neither does the
knowledge of the exact amount bring any benefit, nor does the lack thereof
bring about any harm religionwise. We are ordered to believe in the apparent
intent of the revelation, while we are not required to pursue any knowledge
beyond that.
Although no price is mentioned concerning the sale of Joseph in the Qur'an
and the commentaries only speculate from anywhere between 20 to 40 dirham,
what is clear is that he was sold for a few pieces of silver which were countable,
not weighed, and well below the actual price of a slave. We have already noted
that dirham was known in pre-Islamic Arabia and during the advent of
Islam, any silver coin was called a dirham. It was also a unit of weight
and coinage. It also represented a monetary unit
that might or might not be represented by a circulating coin. This makes
dirham a word with a multiplicity of meanings. In the light of our study
of coinage in ancient Egypt, it is clear that the description of the transaction
darāhima maʿdūdatin (i.e., a few pieces of silver, countable)
is accurate. Silver was used in ancient Egypt in commerce, in the form of deben
and sht (or shty) even before the advent
of Joseph in Egypt. Furthermore, it was noted that the commercial transactions
related to deben and sht of gold, silver and copper
involved counting, for example, 24 copper deben for the renting of land
as mentioned in the Hekanakhte Papyri. It must be emphasized that since reference
is made only to the number of deben that they were of a standard metal
quality as well as of a standard weight. Furthermore, the texts nowhere say
that either deben or sht were weighed or tested for
quality. In the case of dishonesty, the standard was maintained by weighing.
It was discussed earlier that inscribed examples of weights from ancient Egypt
of this standard were available.
Smith's says that according to Genesis 37:28 Joseph was sold for 20 shekels.
This was "about a price of a slave around that time period. So not only
does the Bible get the right denomination, it also gets the right currency."
There are serious problems with Smith's claims. To start with, in the book of
Genesis, Joseph was sold twice; firstly by
his brothers "who sold him for twenty shekels of silver to the Ishmaelites,
who took him to Egypt" (Genesis 37:28) and secondly, the Midianites who
"sold Joseph in Egypt to Potiphar, one of Pharaoh's
officials, the captain of the guard" (Genesis 37:36). The Qur'an, on the
other hand, mentions only one sale of Joseph to
al-ʿAziz in Egypt by travellers who picked
him from a well (12:19-21). Comparing the biblical
and the Qur'anic stories, it is amply clear that neither of the two books mention
any price for the sale of Joseph in Egypt. But the Qur'an does describe
this sale as the one involving a few pieces of silver which are countable. Undoubtedly,
Smith has confused himself thoroughly with the stories.
Secondly, the claim that Joseph was sold for 20 shekels being "about
a price of a slave around that time period" is not based on data from Egypt
because this sale never took in Egypt! If he had bothered to check, he would
have found that Professor K. A. Kitchen used the data from the ancient Near
East to work out the price of a slave around the time when Joseph lived.[90]
4. "Daric"
In The Time Of David?
Does Smith's evangelical Christian tour of the British Museum really look "...
at all the biblical evidence ..." in relation to Jewish coinage? Given
his cobweb of faulty assumptions and factually incorrect statements noted so
far with regard to the dirham, let us now take the opportunity to discuss
certain aspects of the Hebrew Bible in relation to Jewish coinage.
It is quite well-known that the author-composers of various books of the Old
Testament were not eye-witnesses. They composed the books hundreds of years
after the actual events and narrated the stories with terms that were popular
in their own day to help the readers understand the events of the past. Such
a colouring of the stories has resulted in quite a few anachronisms in the Old
Testament, such as the mention of the ruler of Egypt as "Pharaoh"
during the time of Abraham and Joseph, when no Pharaohs
existed in their times! Another example is the mention of the name "Potiphar"
in the time of Joseph. The earliest attestation of the name "Potiphar"
in Egypt post-dates both Joseph and Moses and it comes from the 21st Dynasty
of the Third Intermediate Period (c. 1070 946 BCE) in ancient
Egypt. Since we are dealing with coins, it is worthwhile saying something about
the mention of "daric" in the time of David in 1 Chronicles
29:7. In 1 Chronicles 29, David was asking an assembly of people to donate for
the construction of the Temple. The people gave generously "toward the
work on the temple of God five thousand talents and ten
thousand darics of gold, ten thousand talents of silver, eighteen
thousand talents of bronze and a hundred thousand talents of iron."
According to the chronology of the Old Testament, David's reign was between
c. 1011 and c. 971 BCE.[91]
Compared to this time period, when was daric introduced? Concerning the
origins of daric, The Seaby Coin Encyclopaedia
says:
Daric. A gold coin of the ancient Persian Empire,
first struck under (and named after) Darius the Great, 521 - 486 B.C. It weighed
8.4 grammes, contained 3% silver alloy, and became the most widely diffused
gold coin of the ancient world, accepted throughout the Mediterranean and
Black Sea areas and east as far as India.[92]
In other words, the Persian gold coin daric appeared some 400 years
after the reign of David. Hence the use of daric during the time of David
is an anachronism. Over 100 years ago The Jewish Encyclopedia
had already catalogued several errors in the Hebrew Bible (i.e., Protestant
Old Testament) arising from their study of Jewish coinage.
No credence whatever can therefore be placed in late
Jewish stories mentioning coins of Abraham, Joshua, or David, or even Mordecai
(Ber. R. xxxix. ; B. K. 97a). Such passages in Scripture as seem to point
to the use of coined money during that period are either interpolated or late.
A notable instance of anachronism occurs in
I Chron. xxix. 7, where among the offerings of the chiefs of Israel in the
time of King David are mentioned 10,000 gold "adarkonim" or darics,
coins which were not struck before the time of King Darius I, i.e.,
more than 400 years after David.[93]
This notable anachronism has not gone unnoticed by contemporary Judeo-Christian
scholars either and is admitted in many Bible dictionaries and commentaries.
Let us survey some of them.
Concerning the use of daric in the time of David in 1 Chronicles 29:7,
the HarperCollins Bible Dictionary says:
Daric... a gold coin, probably introduced by Darius
I... It is used of Temple building contributions in Ezra 8:27 and anachronistically
in 1 Chron. 29:7.[94]
Similarly, H. W. Perkin writing in The International
Standard Bible Encyclopedia mentions the anachronistic terms for money
mentioned in the Old Testament. He says:
Anachronistic Terms for Money:
Since coins apparently were not known in Palestine before the Exile, biblical
references to money in the preexilic period are to be the weight in metal.
Occasionally an author writing about an earlier event used a monetary term
familiar to his readers rather than the word for the money of the earlier
period. This procedure may explain the term
"daric" in 1 Ch. 29:7.[95]
Similar conclusions concerning the use of daric during the time of David
were also reached by The Eerdmans Bible Dictionary.
Daric [dăr'ĭk]. A Persian gold
coin weighing about 8.4 g. (.3 oz.), bearing the image of Darius I Hystaspes
(ca. 500 B.C.) and therefore assumed to have been coined by that ruler;
it is possible that the name derived from Akk. darag mana (one-sixtieth
of a mina). In the Old Testament the term (Heb. 'adarkôn)
occurs at Ezra 8:27 and at 1 Chr. 29:7 (during
David's days, likely an anachronism).[96]
Such observations are also made in various Bible commentaries. While discussing
1 Chronicles 29:7, The Wycliffe Bible Commentary
says:
The chronicler used the daric to evaluate this offering
in 970 B.C., even though coinage was actually
unknown to David.[97]
New Bible Commentary 21st Century Edition also
mentions this anachronism by saying:
It is made real for the Chronicler's first readers by
the use of the term daric (7), a coin
known in their day but not in David's.[98]
The explanation of this glaring anachronism is usually done by using the concept
of prolepsis, i.e.,
the assignment of an event or a name, to a time that precedes it. Prolepsis
is used for the sake of convenience in order that the reader or audience can
be communicated in a better way. The use of daric in 1 Chronicles 29:7
is explained by The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
by saying that the Chronicler used it as an "equivalent" to explain
the money involved.
Daric... Since coinage had not been invented in
David's time, the reference in 1 Ch. 29:7 is to an equivalent in use at the
time the Chronicler was compiling his work.[99]
A similar explanation is also made in The Expositor's
Bible Commentary which says:
The "daric" was a Persian gold coin, first
issued by Darius I in the century before Ezra, though in David's day this
figure - equivalent to about two and one-half talents - would have represented
the corresponding weight in small pieces of the precious metal.[100]
As it was mentioned earlier, the most likely reason for the existence of daric
during the time of David was the late compilation of 1 Chronicles. The compilation
might have dated well after the introduction of daric by Darius I. This
has lead Dillard and Longman III to the opinion that 1 Chronicles could not
have been written before the 5th century BCE. Acknowledging the anachronism,
they say:
In 1 Chronicle 29:7 part of the people's giving for the
construction of the temple is reported in darics. The daric is a Persian
coin named after Darius; it was not minted before 515 B.C., and sufficient
time must be allowed for it to gain wide circulation as a monetary standard
also in Judah. These two passages suggest that the Chronicler could not have
written before the mid-fifth century. It is more difficult to establish the
latest date by which he would have written, though it is improbable that he
wrote later than the beginning of the fourth century.[101]
Given such a serious anachronism, it is surprising to see the evangelical literature
dealing with the Bible "difficulties" hardly discusses it.[102]
5. Conclusions
In a lecture given to his fellow missionaries Joseph Smith had claimed that
the use of the word dirham during the time of Joseph is an anachronism
in the Qur'an. To support his claim, he said that the dirham was created
only after the advent of Islam by Umar, who subsequently introduced the
dirham to replace the drachma. Furthermore, he added that Joseph
was sold to the Egyptians for a few dirhams, counted out. According to
him, only coins are counted and there were no coins in the time of Joseph, it
was bullion. Regrettably, Smith's superficial knowledge of numismatics in general
and the numismatic history of the ancient near east in particular, has caused
him to make many gross errors fundamental in nature.
It was shown that pre-Islamic Arabs were aware of the dirham. The evidence
comes from the pre-Islamic romance poetry of Antara. The Arabs from pre-Islamic
Arabia handled Persian currency and called it dirham which came from
the Persian drahm. Both Muslim and non-Muslim philologists agree that
this is a word of foreign origin borrowed into Arabic. It is clear that the
use of the dirham in the Qur'an is not an anachronism, as the Arabs from
pre-Islamic times were already aware of it.
Moreover, during the advent of Islam, any silver coin was called a dirham;
it was also a unit of weight and coinage, and represented a monetary unit that
might or might not be represented by a circulating coin. Given the multifarious
nature of dirham, the use of this word in the story of Joseph represents
silver "coinage"; the silver used as deben or sht
in ancient Egypt. A study of "coinage" in ancient Egypt clearly shows
that precious metals, especially silver, were used as money in the form of deben
and sht. During trade, the numbers of deben or sht
were specified, clearly suggesting that they were counted and were of a standard
metal quality as well as of a standard weight. The texts do not say that either
deben or sht were weighed or tested for quality during
commercial transactions. Although very common from Ramesside times onward, the
evidence of such transactions extend all the way down to the mid-5th Dynasty
of the Old Kingdom Period, where, in one particular market scene, a particular
length of cloth is valued at 6 sht.
In assessing the evidence of coinage in ancient Egypt, Černý came
to the conclusion that shty "was a flat, round piece
of metal 1/12 deben, that is about 7.6 grams, in weight, possibly with
an inscription to indicate this weight or the name of the issuing authority",
adding "If so, the 'piece' was practically a coin."[103]
Although Černý's assessment was startling,[104]
he was not too far off the mark.
In conclusion, the Qur'anic description of the transaction darāhima
maʿdūdatin (i.e., a few pieces of silver, countable) is accurate
from the point of view of ancient Egypt.
And Allah knows best!
References & Notes
[1] J. Mackay, Key Definitions In Numismatics,
1982, Frederick Muller Limited: London, p. 19.
[2] E. Jungle, The Seaby Coin Encyclopaedia,
1992 (Rev.), Seaby: London, p. 55.
[3] W. Ahlwardt (Ed.), The Divans Of The Six Ancient
Arabic Poets: Ennābiga, Antara, Tharafa, Zuhair, Alqama And
Imruulqais, 1870, Trübner & Co.: London, p. 45, XXI:21.
[4] A. Jeffery, The Foreign Vocabulary Of The Qur'an,
1938, Oriental Institute: Baroda (India), p. 130.
[5] B. V. Head, "On A Himyarite Tetradrachm
And The Tresor De San'a", The Numismatic
Chronicle And Journal Of The Numismatic Society, 1880, Volume 20 (New
Series), pp. 303-310 and Plate XV; S. C. H. Munro-Hay, "The
Coinage Of Shabwa (Hadhramawt), And Other Ancient South Arabian Coinage In The
National Museum, Aden", Syria, 1991,
Volume 68, pp. 393-418; G. Dembski, "The Coins
Of Arabia Felix", in W. Daum (ed.), Yemen:
3000 Years Of Art And Civilization In Arabia Felix, 1987?, Pinguin-Verlag
(Innsbruck) and Umschau-Verlag (Frankfurt/Main), pp. 125-128; "Coins"
in St. J. Simpson (Ed.), Queen Of Sheba: Treasures From
Ancient Yemen, 2002, The British Museum Press: London, pp. 73-77.
[6] B. V. Head, "On Himyarite And Other Arabian
Imitations Of Coins Of Athens", The Numismatic
Chronicle And Journal Of The Numismatic Society, 1878, Volume 18 (New
Series), pp. 273-284; G. F. Hill, "The Ancient
Coinage Of Southern Arabia", Proceedings
Of The British Academy, 1915-1916, Volume 7, pp. 57-84, Plate I, especially
pp. 83-84.
[7] For a comprehensive tabulation of the excavations findings see D. T. Potts,
The Pre-Islamic Coinage Of Eastern Arabia: With An Appendix
By Remy Boucharlat And Monique Drieux, 1991, CNI Publications 14, Museum
Tusculanum Press, University of Copenhagen: Copenhagen. Also see a further publication
by D. T. Potts, Supplements To The Pre-Islamic Coinage
Of Eastern Arabia, 1994, CNI Publications 16, Museum Tusculanum Press,
University of Copenhagen: Copenhagen, p. 82 for dating; C. J. Howgego &
D. T. Potts, "Greek And Roman Coins From Eastern
Arabia", Arabian Archaeology And Epigraphy,
1992, Volume 3, pp. 183-189. Howgego and Potts show an interesting example of
a Sassanian coin overstruck on a Roman coin.
[8] D. T. Potts, Supplements To The Pre-Islamic Coinage
Of Eastern Arabia, 1994, op. cit., p. 81.
[9] Destur H. J. Asa (Revised & Expanded by M. Haug), An
Old Pahlavi-Pazand Glossary, 1870, Government Central Book Depot: Bombay
& Messrs Trübner & Co.: London, p. 105; Also see "Coins
And Coinage" in E. Yarshater (Ed.), Encyclopædia
Iranica, 1993, Volume VI, Mazda Publishers: Costa Mesa (CA), p. 17. It
says:
The Persian drahm was called derham in
Arabic.
Similarly, James Mackay says:
Dirhem (direm) Unit of currency in the Arab monetary
system, derived from the drachmae struck by the Sassanids in Persia.
J. Mackay, Key Definitions In Numismatics, 1982,
op. cit., p. 32.
[10] H. F. J. Junker (Ed.), The Frahang I Pahlavīk,
1912, Carl Winter's Universitatsbuchhandlung: Heidelberg, p. 78 (in the glossary
section).
[11] "Dirham" in E. Yarshater (Ed.),
Encyclopædia Iranica, 1996, Volume VII,
Mazda Publishers: Costa Mesa (CA), pp. 424-426.
[12] G. C. Miles, "Dirham" in B.
Lewis, Ch. Pellat and J. Schacht (Eds.), Encyclopaedia
of Islam (New Edition), 1965, Volume II, E. J. Brill (Leiden) & Luzac
& Co. (London), p. 319.
[13] "Arab-Sassanian Coinage" in
R. G. Doty, Encyclopedic Dictionary Of Numismatics,
1982, Robert Hale: London, p. 14; Also see "Arab-Sassanian
Coinage" in E. Jungle, The Seaby Coin Encyclopaedia,
1992 (Rev.), op. cit., p. 27.
[14] M. Mitchiner, Oriental Coins And Their Values:
The World Of Islam, 1998 (Repr.), Volume I, Hawkins Publications: London,
p. 57.
[15] "Dirhem" in R. G. Doty, Encyclopedic
Dictionary Of Numismatics, 1982, op. cit., p. 107.
[16] "Shekel", The
Universal Jewish Encyclopedia, 1969, Volume 9, Ktav Publishing House,
Inc.: New York, p. 501; Also see "Shekel",
Encyclopaedia Judaica, 1971, Volume 15, Encyclopaedia
Judaica Jerusalem, cols. 1347-1349.
[17] Abū Mansūr Mawhūb bin Ahmad al-Jawālīqī
(Ed. E. Sachau), Al-Muarrab min al-Kalām
al-Ajamī, 1867, Verlag Von W. Engelmann: Leipzig, pp. 66-67.
[18] Shihāb al-Dīn Ahmad al-Khafājī, Kitāb
Shifā' al-Ghalīl fī-ma fī Kalām al-Arab min al-Dakhīl,
1907 (1325 AH), Matbaat al-Saadah: Al-Qahirah, p. 83.
[19] A. Jeffery, The Foreign Vocabulary Of The Qur'an,
1938, op. cit., p. 129.
[20] "Drachma" in A. Room, Dictionary
Of Coin Names, 1987, Routledge & Kegan Paul: London and New York,
p. 70; "Drachma" in J. M. Jones,
A Dictionary Of Ancient Greek Coins, 1986, Seaby:
London, p. 81.
[21] A. Jeffery, The Foreign Vocabulary Of The Qur'an,
1938, op. cit., p. 130.
[22] J. M. Cowan (Editor), Hans-Wehr Dictionary Of
Modern Written Arabic, 1980 (Reprint), Librairie Du Liban, Beirut, p.
595.
[23] J. W. Curtis, "Coinage Of Pharaonic Egypt",
Journal Of Egyptian Archaeology, 1957, Volume
43, p. 71.
[24] Translation taken from K. A. Kitchen, Ramesside
Inscriptions: Translated & Annotated (Translations), 1996, Volume
II (Ramesses II, Royal Inscriptions), Blackwell Publishing Ltd.: Oxford (UK),
p. 172; For inscriptions see K. A. Kitchen, Ramesside
Inscriptions: Historical And Biographical, 1979, Volume II, B. H. Blackwell
Ltd.: Oxford (UK), No. 333:1.
[25] R. A. Caminos, Late-Egyptian Miscellanies,
1954, Brown Egyptological Studies I, Oxford University Press: London, p. 384,
Papyrus Lansing [4.8-10].
[26] T. E. Peet, The Great Tomb Robberies Of The Twentieth
Egyptian Dynasty: Being A Critical Study, With Translations And Commentaries,
of The Papyri In Which These Are Recorded, 1930, Volume I (Text), The
Provost & Fellows Of Worcester College At The Clarendon Press: Oxford, p.
153, Papyrus BM 10052 11:7-8.
[27] A. E. P. Weigall, Catalogue Général
Des Antiquités Égyptiennes Du Musée Du Caire Nos 31271-31670:
Weights And Balances, 1908, Imprimerie de L'Institut Français
D'Archéologie Orientale: Cairo, for deben and kite see
pp. iii-vii and pp. ix-x, respectively.
[28] J. J. Janssen, Commodity Prices From The Ramessid
Period: An Economic Study Of The Village Of Necropolis Workmen At Thebes,
1975, E. J. Brill: Leiden, p. 101.
[29] P. Grandet, "Weights And Measures"
in D. B. Redford (Ed.), The Oxford Encyclopedia Of Ancient
Egypt, 2001, Volume 3, Oxford University Press, p. 495; Also see "Weights
And Measures" in T. Wilkinson, The Thames
& Hudson Dictionary Of Ancient Egypt, 2005, Thames & Hudson:
London, p. 260.
[30] A. E. P. Weigall, Catalogue Général
Des Antiquités Égyptiennes Du Musée Du Caire Nos 31271-31670:
Weights And Balances, 1908, op. cit., p. iii.
[31] A. Erman & H. Grapow, Wörterbuch Der
Aegyptischen Sprache, 1931, Volume V, J. C. Hinrichs'sche Buchhandlung:
Leipzig, p. 437, 3; p. 438, 2.
[32] A. E. P. Weigall, Catalogue Général
Des Antiquités Égyptiennes Du Musée Du Caire Nos 31271-31670:
Weights And Balances, 1908, op. cit., p. ix.
[33] A. Erman & H. Grapow, Wörterbuch Der
Aegyptischen Sprache, 1931, Volume IV, J. C. Hinrichs'sche Buchhandlung:
Leipzig, p. 418, 5. The picture is taken from T. E. Peet, "The
Unit Of The Value ŠcTY In Papyrus
Bulaq 11", in Mélanges Maspero (I
Orient Ancien), 1935-1938, Mémoires Publiés Par Les Membres
De L'Institut Français D'Archéologie Orientale: Volume 66, Imprimerie
de L'Institut Francais D'Archéologie Orientale: Cairo, p. 185.
[34] E. W. Castle, "Shipping And Trade In Ramesside
Egypt", Journal Of The Economic And Social
History Of The Orient, 1992, Volume 35, p. 263.
[35] T. E. Peet, "The Unit Of The Value ŠcTY
In Papyrus Bulaq 11", in Mélanges
Maspero (I Orient Ancien), 1935-1938, op. cit., p. 199.
[36] T. G. H. James, Pharaoh's People: Scenes From
Life In Imperial Egypt, 1984, The Bodley Head: London, p. 268, note 20.
[37] J. Černý, "Prices And Wages
In The Ramesside Period", Journal Of World
History (Cahiers D'Histoire Mondiale),
1954, Volume 1, No. 4, pp. 910-912.
[38] A. H. Gardiner, "Four Papyri Of The 18th
Dynasty From Kahun", Zeitschrift Für
Ägyptische Sprache Und Altertumskunde, 1906, Volume 43, pp. 45-47.
[39] T. E. Peet, The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus: British
Museum 10057 And 10058 Introduction, Transcription, Translation And Commentary,
1923, University Press of Liverpool Limited and Hodder & Stoughton Limited:
London, p. 3.
[40] ibid. pp. 104-105, Plate R. The translation is also available along
with a plate in F. L. Griffith, "Notes On Egyptian
Weights And Measures", Proceedings Of The
Society Of Biblical Archæology, 1892, Volume 14, pp. 437-438.
[41] A. M. Moussa & H. Altenmüller, Das Grab
Des Nianchchnum Und Chnumhotep, 1977, Archäologische Veröffentlichungen
(Volume 21), Verlag Philipp von Zabern: Mainz Am Rhein, Tafel 24-25, Abb. 10;
The picture is partly reproduced in T. G. H. James, Pharaoh's
People: Scenes From Life In Imperial Egypt, 1984, op. cit., pp.
254-255.
[42] A. M. Moussa & H. Altenmüller, Das Grab
Des Nianchchnum Und Chnumhotep, 1977, op. cit., p. 85.
[43] H. Altenmüller, "Trade And Markets"
in D. B. Redford (Ed.), The Oxford Encyclopedia Of Ancient
Egypt, 2001, Volume 3, Oxford University Press, p. 446.
[44] T. G. H. James, The Hekanakhte Papers And Other
Early Middle Kingdom Documents, 1962, Publications Of The Metropolitan
Museum Of Art Egyptian Expedition: Volume XIX, New York, pp. 2-6.
[45] ibid., p. 33.
[46] K. Baer, "An Eleventh Dynasty Farmer's
Letters To His Family", Journal Of The American
Oriental Society, 1963, Volume 83, p. 9.
[47] T. G. H. James, Pharaoh's People: Scenes From
Life In Imperial Egypt, 1984, op. cit., p. 245; Also see T. G.
H. James, The Hekanakhte Papers And Other Early Middle
Kingdom Documents, 1962, op. cit., p. 44 note 57.
[48] A. Mariette, Les Papyrus Égyptiens du Musee
de Boulaq, 1871-2, Volume II, Paris, p. 5 for the discussion on the papyrus
11.
[49] M. R. Weill, "L'Unité De Valeur
Shat Et Le Papyrus De Boulaq No. 11", Revue
De L'Égypte Ancienne, 1926, Volume I, pp. 45-87.
[50] T. E. Peet, "The Unit Of The Value ŠcTY
In Papyrus Bulaq 11", in Mélanges
Maspero (I Orient Ancien), 1935-1938, op. cit., pp. 188-191.
[51] ibid., p. 190. Papyrus Boulaq 11, 3:6-7. As for the dating
of this document see p. 187.
[52] T. G. H. James, Pharaoh's People: Scenes From
Life In Imperial Egypt, 1984, op. cit., p. 260.
[53] T. Logan, "The Jmyt-pr Document:
Form, Function, And Significance", Journal
Of The American Research Center In Egypt, 2000, Volume 37, p. 63. We
have written shat as sht.
[54] J. H. Breasted, Ancient Records Of Egypt: Historical
Documents, 1906, Volume II (The Eighteenth Dynasty), University of Chicago
Press: Chicago, pp. 283-289.
[55] T. E. Peet, "The Egyptian Words For 'Money',
'Buy', And 'Sell'" in Studies Presented
To F. Ll. Griffith, 1932, Egyptian Exploration Society: London, pp. 124-125;
This papyrus was also published by K. A. Kitchen, Ramesside
Inscriptions: Historical And Biographical, 1983, Volume 6, B. H. Blackwell
Ltd.: Oxford, p. 612.
[56] J. J. Janssen, Commodity Prices From The Ramessid
Period: An Economic Study Of The Village Of Necropolis Workmen At Thebes,
1975, op. cit., p. 499.
[57] E. W. Castle, "Shipping And Trade In Ramesside
Egypt", Journal Of The Economic And Social
History Of The Orient, 1992, op. cit., pp. 261-262.
[58] B. J. Kemp, Ancient Egypt: Anatomy Of A Civilization,
1989, Routledge: London & New York, p. 259.
[59] A. E. P. Weigall, Catalogue Général
Des Antiquités Égyptiennes Du Musée Du Caire Nos 31271-31670:
Weights And Balances, 1908, op. cit., p. iii.
[60] A. Erman & H. Grapow, Wörterbuch Der
Aegyptischen Sprache, 1931, Volume V, op. cit., p. 436, 6.
[61] E. W. Castle, "Shipping And Trade In Ramesside
Egypt", Journal Of The Economic And Social
History Of The Orient, 1992, op. cit., p. 264.
[62] T. G. H. James, The Hekanakhte Papers And Other
Early Middle Kingdom Documents, 1962, op. cit., p. 118.
[63] T. E. Peet, "The Egyptian Words For 'Money',
'Buy', And 'Sell'" in Studies Presented
To F. Ll. Griffith, 1932, op. cit., p. 122, note 1.
[64] E. Drioton, "Un Document Sur La Vie Chère
à Thèbes Au Début De La XVIII Dynastie", Bulletin
De La Societé Française D'Égyptologie, 1953, No.
12, pp. 15-17.
[65] T. G. H. James, The Hekanakhte Papers And Other
Early Middle Kingdom Documents, 1962, op. cit., p. 113.
[66] E. F. Wente, "A Note On The Eloquent Peasant,
B I, 13-15", Journal Of The Near Eastern
Studies, 1965, Volume 24, p. 106.
[67] J. Černý, "Prices And Wages
In The Ramesside Period", Journal Of World
History (Cahiers D'Histoire Mondiale),
1954, op. cit., p. 912.
[68] A. Erman & H. Grapow, Wörterbuch Der
Aegyptischen Sprache, 1930, Volume IV, op. cit., p. 418, 9.
[69] E. W. Castle, "Shipping And Trade In Ramesside
Egypt", Journal Of The Economic And Social
History Of The Orient, 1992, op. cit., pp. 267-268.
[70] P. E. Newberry, The Life Of Rekhmara, Vezir Of
Upper Egypt Under Thothmes III And Amenhetep II (Circa B.C. 1471-1448) With
Twenty-Two Plates, 1900, Archibald Constable and Co. Ltd.: Westminster,
Plate V.
[71] E. Dziobek & M. Abdel Raziq, Das Grab Des
Sobekhotep: Theben Nr. 63, 1990, Archäologische Veröffentlichungen
(Volume 71), Verlag Philipp von Zabern: Mainz am Rhein.
[72] H. Frankfort & J. D. S. Pendlebury, The City
of Akhenaten, Part II, The North Suburbs And The Desert Altars, 1933,
Egypt Exploration Society: London, Plate XLIII, 4.
[73] E. Dziobek & M. Abdel Raziq, Das Grab Des
Sobekhotep: Theben Nr. 63, 1990, op. cit., Plate 3; Also in T.
G. H. James, Pharaoh's People: Scenes From Life In Imperial
Egypt, 1984, op. cit., Plate 10 facing p. 161.
[74] T. G. H. James, Pharaoh's People: Scenes From
Life In Imperial Egypt, 1984, op. cit., Plate 11 facing p. 192.
[75] H. Frankfort & J. D. S. Pendlebury, The City
of Akhenaten, Part II, The North Suburbs And The Desert Altars, 1933,
op. cit., p. 60 and Plate XLIII, 4.
[76] A. E. P. Weigall, Catalogue Général
Des Antiquités Égyptiennes Du Musée Du Caire Nos 31271-31670:
Weights And Balances, 1908, op. cit., p. xii.
[77] C. F. A. Schaeffer, "Les Fouilles De Minet-El-Beida
Et De Ras Shamra: Troisième Campagne (Printemps 1931)", Syria:
Revue D'Art Oriental et D'Archéologie, 1932, Volume 13, pp. 1-27
and Plates IX (lower right) and XVI.
[78] C. F. A. Schaeffer, "Les Fouilles Des Ras
Shamra-Ugarit: Sixième Campagne (Printemps 1934)", Syria:
Revue D'Art Oriental et D'Archéologie, 1935, Volume 16, p. 144
and figure 6 on p. 146.
[79] E. Sollberger, "Selected Texts From American
Collections", Journal Of Cuneiform Studies,
1956, Volume 10, p. 23.
[80] M. A. Powell, Jr., "A Contribution To The
History Of Money In Mesopotamia Prior To The Invention Of Coinage"
in B. Hruška & G. Komoróczy, Festschrift
Lubor Matouš - II, 1978, Assyriologia V, Budapest, p. 212.
[81] E. W. Castle, "Shipping And Trade In Ramesside
Egypt", Journal Of The Economic And Social
History Of The Orient, 1992, op. cit., p. 272.
[82] M. A. Powell, Jr., "A Contribution To The
History Of Money In Mesopotamia Prior To The Invention Of Coinage"
in B. Hruška & G. Komoróczy, Festschrift
Lubor Matouš - II, 1978, op. cit., Plate II A, p. 240.
[83] J. A. Brinkman, M. Civil, I. J. Gelb, A. L. Oppenheim & E. Reiner
(Eds.), The Assyrian Dictionary Of The Oriental Institute
Of The University Of Chicago, 1984, Volume 15, Oriental Institute: Chicago
& J. J. Augustin Verlagsbuchhandlung: Glückstadt, p. 224.
[84] M. A. Powell, Jr., "A Contribution To The
History Of Money In Mesopotamia Prior To The Invention Of Coinage"
in B. Hruška & G. Komoróczy, Festschrift
Lubor Matouš - II, 1978, op. cit., p. 217.
[85] E. W. Castle, "Shipping And Trade In Ramesside
Egypt", Journal Of The Economic And Social
History Of The Orient, 1992, op. cit., p. 273.
[86] For a brief description of market scenes in ancient Egypt see "Markt"
in W. Heck & E. Otto, Lexikon Der Ägyptologie,
1980, Volume III, Otto Harrassowitz: Wiesbaden, Cols. 1191-1194.
[87] C. R. Lepsius, Denkmaeler aus Aegypten und Aethiopien:
nach den Zeichnungen der von seiner Majestät dem Koenige von Preussen Friedrich
Wilhelm IV nach diesen Ländern gesendeten und in den Jahren 1842-1845 Ausgeführten
Wissenschaftlichen Expedition, 1849-59, Volume II, Nicolaische Buchhandlung:
Berlin, Plate 96.
[88] S. I. Hodjash & O. D. Berlev, "The
Market Scene In The Mastaba Of D3d3-m-nh
(Tp-m-nh)", Altorientalische
Forschungen VII, 1980, Volume 15, p. 45.
[89] ibid. Renger says that caution must be exercised concerning Hodjash
and Berlev's suggestion that the bags could have been money purses. See J. Renger,
"Patterns Of Non-Institutional Trade And Non-Commercial
Exchange In Ancient Mesopotamia At The Beginning Of The Second Millennium B.C."
in A. Archi (Ed.), Circulation Of Goods In Non-Palatial
Context In The Ancient Near East, 1984, Incunabula Graeca: Volume LXXXII,
Edizioni Dell'Ateneo: Rome, p. 54, note 70.
[90] K. A. Kitchen, On The Reliability Of The Old Testament,
2003, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company: Michigan, pp. 344-345; K. A. Kitchen,
"Genesis 12-50 In The Near Eastern World",
in R. S. Hess, G. J. Wenham & P. E. Satterthwaite (Eds.), He
Swore An Oath: Biblical Themes From Genesis 12-50, 1994, The Paternoster
Press: Carlisle (UK) and Baker Book House: Grand Rapids (MI), pp. 79-80; K.
A. Kitchen, Ancient Orient And Old Testament,
1966, The Tyndale Press: London, pp. 52-53.
[91] "Chronology Of The Old Testament"
in J. D. Douglas (Organizing Editor), New Bible Dictionary,
1984, Second Edition, Inter-Varsity Press: Leicester (UK) and Tyndale House
Publishers, Inc.: Wheaton (IL), p. 196.
[92] "Daric" in E. Jungle, The
Seaby Coin Encyclopaedia, 1992 (Rev.), op. cit., p. 80. For similar
statements also see "Daric" in J.
Mackay, Key Definitions In Numismatics, 1982,
op. cit., p. 58; "Daric" in
R. G. Doty, Encyclopedic Dictionary Of Numismatics,
1982, op. cit., pp. 84-85; "Daric"
in A. Room, Dictionary Of Coin Names, 1987, op.
cit., p. 60; "Daric" in A. R.
Frey, Dictionary Of Numismatic Names, 1947, Barnes
& Noble, Inc., p. 61.
[93] "Numismatics", The
Jewish Encyclopedia, 1905, Volume IX, Funk and Wagnalls Company: London
& New York, p. 350.
[94] "Daric" in P. J. Achtemeier,
HarperCollins Bible Dictionary, 1996, Harper
& Row Publishers: San Francisco, p. 225.
[95] H. W. Perkin, "Money" in G.
W. Bromiley (Gen. Ed.), The International Standard Bible
Encyclopedia, 1986 (Fully Revised, Illustrated), Volume III, William
B. Eerdmans Publishing Company: Grand Rapids (MI), p. 403.
[96] "Daric" in A. C. Myers (Ed.),
The Eerdmans Bible Dictionary, 1987, William
B. Eerdmans Publishing Company: Grand Rapids (MI), p. 260.
[97] C. F. Pfeiffer & E. F. Harrison (Eds.), The
Wycliffe Bible Commentary, 1963, Oliphants Ltd.: London and Edinburgh,
p. 389.
[98] D.A. Carson, R. T. France, J. A. Motyer, G. J. Wenham (Eds.), New
Bible Commentary 21st Century Edition, 1994, Inter-Varsity Press: Leicester
(UK) and Downers Grove (IL), p. 401.
[99] "Daric" in G. W. Bromiley (Gen.
Ed.), The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia,
1979 (Fully Revised, Illustrated), Volume I, William B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company: Grand Rapids (MI), p. 867.
[100] F. E. Gaebelein (Ed.), The Expositor's Bible
Commentary With The New International Version Of The Holy Bible, 1988,
Volume 4, Zondervan Publishing House: Grand Rapids (MI), p. 437.
[101] R. B. Dillard & T. Longman III, An Introduction
To The Old Testament, 1995, Zondervan Publishing House: Grand Rapids
(MI), p. 171.
[102] A survey of the four most popular encyclopedias of Bible "difficulties"
reveal no trace of a discussion on the issue of daric during the time
of David. See N. L. Geisler & R. M. Brooks, When
Skeptics Ask, 2001, Baker Books: Grand Rapids (MI); N. L. Geisler, Baker
Encyclopedia Of Christian Apologetics, 2002, Baker Books: Grand Rapids
(MI); N. Geisler & T. Howe, When Critics Ask: A
Popular Handbook On Bible Difficulties, 2004 (7th Printing), Baker Books:
Grand Rapids (MI); G. L. Archer Jr., New International
Encyclopedia Of Bible Difficulties, 1982, Zondervan: Grand Rapids (MI).
[103] J. Černý, "Prices And Wages
In The Ramesside Period", Journal Of World
History (Cahiers D'Histoire Mondiale),
1954, op. cit., p. 912.
[104] Černý's assessment was criticized by Janssen that no proof
has been shown for "an inscription to indicate this weight or the name
of the issuing authority". See J. J. Janssen, Commodity
Prices From The Ramessid Period: An Economic Study Of The Village Of Necropolis
Workmen At Thebes, 1975, op. cit., p. 105.
The images above are reproduced from the stated sources under the provisions
of the copyright law.
This allows for the reproduction of portions of copyrighted material for non-commercial,
educational purposes.
With the exception for those images which have passed into the public domain,
the use of these images for commercial purposes is expressly prohibited without
the consent of the copyright holder.
Back To Refutation
Of External Contradictions In The Qur'an