Why
Dost Thou Whet Thy Knife So Earnestly?
by
Simon
Black
Sovereign
Man
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Oxford,
England Oxford is about an hour west of London by train,
and if youve never been, I highly recommend it. On a per-capita
basis, its one of the most cultured cities in the world, right
up there with Vienna, London, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Chicago,
Budapest, and Austin.
Walking down
Cornmarket Street on a beautiful summer day, its common to
pass opera singers and concert pianists plying their trade for crowds
of tourists (which have become increasingly Chinese over the past
few summers
)
Yesterday evening
I attended an outstanding performance of Shakespeares Merchant
of Venice; if youre unfamiliar with the play, the
story is about a young Venetian nobleman named Bassanio who needs
3,000 gold ducats to woo a beautiful heiress. Having squandered
his wealth, Bassanio approaches his friend Antonio for a loan.
Antonio is
cash poor but asset rich, so he arranges to borrow the sum that
his friend requires from a local Shylock. The Shylock agrees on
the condition that he collects a pound of Antonios flesh in
the event of default.
Needless to
say, Antonios fortunes turn for the worst and he defaults
on the debt owed 3,000 ducats. The play climaxes with a court
scene in which the Shylock seeks to enforce his bond and collect
the pound of flesh from Antonio. (Why dost thou whet thy knife
so earnestly?)
Why dost thou
whet thy knife so earnestly?
In the middle
of the performance, I got curious about the sum. How much is 3,000
ducats in todays money? A quick check on my phone gave me
the answer.
A ducats
weight is roughly 3.5 grams, or .11 troy ounces of gold weight
so 3,000 ducats is roughly $530,000 at todays gold price.
In the context
of the play, this amount makes sense; in other words, if one were
to write an updated version of the play to todays standards,
substituting half a million dollars for 3,000 ducats would definitely
fit the plot.
Its an
interesting example of how well gold has held its value; the play
is over 400 years old, written decades before the first colonists
arrived to the New World, and centuries before the introduction
of the US dollar.
During this
time, the gold ducat coin was an internationally accepted medium
of exchange, widely used in trade across Europe, the colonies, and
the Ottoman Empire until the early 20th century.
The ducat began
circulating in earnest in the late 1200s, so the coins status
as a global reserve standard lasted nearly three-quarters of a millennium
a remarkable track record! Before the ducat, the Byzantine solidus
gold coin held that status for the previous 800-years.
The reason
for such unparalleled longevity is simple throughout the
centuries, these coins maintained their gold weight, and hence the
purchasing power for those who held them. When governments began
playing games and debasing the coins, they were quickly dropped
as an international standard.
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the rest of the article
August
10, 2012
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© 2012 Sovereign Man
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