Minting Power: Money, Taxation, and Economic Policy in Ancient Empires
MTA
An economic history of coinage, fiscal systems, and state finance from Lydia to Rome
2nd Edition
In "Minting Power: Money, Taxation, and Economic Policy in Ancient Empires," delve into the fascinating economic underpinnings of the ancient world's most formidable civilizations. This comprehensive history charts the evolution of financial systems from the invention of coinage in Lydia to the complex fiscal machinery of Rome and Byzantium. Discover how early innovations like electrum and bimetallic standards transformed trade, enabling city-states and vast empires alike to fund monumental public works, provision immense armies, and project their authority across continents. The book intricately explores how monetary stability, taxation strategies, and the rise of early banking institutions like the Greek *trapezitai* were not merely ancillary details, but fundamental pillars of imperial growth and endurance.
Journey through the silver-rich mines that fueled Athens' maritime power, witness the ingenious satrapal tribute system of Achaemenid Persia with its gold darics and silver sigloi, and navigate the monumental shift from Rome's bronze *aes* to the ubiquitous silver *denarius*. "Minting Power" reveals how emperors like Augustus reformed chaotic Republican finances into a centralized imperial economy, leveraging coinage as a powerful tool of propaganda. However, it also confronts the devastating consequences of monetary mismanagement, detailing the debasement and hyperinflation that plagued the Late Roman Empire and Diocletian's revolutionary, albeit draconian, attempts at fiscal rescue, culminating in the enduring stability of the Byzantine *solidus*.
This book offers more than a catalog of coins and taxes; it illuminates the perennial challenges of state finance, demonstrating how economic policy actively shaped political trajectories, military successes, and the very fabric of ancient societies. From informal moneylenders in bustling markets to the grand treasuries of imperial capitals, "Minting Power" provides a compelling narrative of how money was made, managed, and manipulated, offering profound lessons on the intricate relationship between wealth, power, and the long-term survival of empires that resonate with economic challenges even today.
This book is essential for anyone interested in ancient history, economic history, and the evolution of financial systems. It will particularly appeal to students, academics, and enthusiasts keen on understanding how money, taxation, and state finance were fundamental to the rise, maintenance, and decline of ancient empires from Lydia to Byzantium. Readers seeking insights into the practical application of economic policy in pre-industrial societies will find this a comprehensive and engaging resource.
December 4, 2025
37,278 words
2 hours 37 minutes
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