A Brief History Of Gold
A child finds a shiny rock in a creek, thousands of years
ago, and the human race is introduced to gold for the first time.
Gold was
first discovered as shining, yellow nuggets. "Gold is where you find
it," so the saying goes, and gold was first discovered in its natural
state, in streams all over the world. No doubt it was the first metal known
to early hominids.
Gold became a part of every human culture. Its brilliance,
natural beauty, and luster, and its great malleability and resistance to
tarnish made it enjoyable to work and play with.
Because gold is dispersed widely throughout the geologic
world, its discovery occurred to many different groups in many different
locales. And nearly everyone who found it was impressed with it, and so was
the developing culture in which they lived.
Gold was the first metal widely known to our species. When
thinking about the historical progress of technology, we consider the
development of iron and copper-working as the greatest contributions to our
species' economic and cultural progress - but gold came first.
Gold is the easiest of the metals to work. It occurs in a
virtually pure and workable state, whereas most other metals tend to be found
in ore-bodies that pose some difficulty in smelting. Gold's early uses were
no doubt ornamental, and its brilliance and permanence (it neither corrodes nor
tarnishes) linked it to deities and royalty in early civilizations .
Gold has always been powerful stuff. The earliest history
of human interaction with gold is long lost to us, but its association with
the gods, with immortality, and with wealth itself are common to many
cultures throughout the world.
Early civilizations equated gold with gods and rulers, and
gold was sought in their name and dedicated to their glorification. Humans
almost intuitively place a high value on gold, equating it with power,
beauty, and the cultural elite. And since gold is widely distributed all over
the globe, we find this same thinking about gold throughout ancient and
modern civilizations everywhere.
Gold, beauty, and power have always gone together. Gold in ancient times was
made into shrines and idols ("the Golden Calf"), plates, cups,
vases and vessels of all kinds, and of course, jewelry for personal
adornment.
 
The "Gold of Troy" treasure hoard, excavated in
Turkey and dating to the era 2450 -2600 B.C., show the range of gold-work
from delicate jewelry to a gold gravy boat weighing a full troy pound. This
was a time when gold was highly valued, but had not yet become money itself.
Rather, it was owned by the powerful and well-connected, or made into objects
of worship, or used to decorate sacred locations.
Gold has always had value to humans, even before it was money. This is
demonstrated by the extraordinary efforts made to obtain it. Prospecting for
gold was a worldwide effort going back thousands of years, even before the
first money in the form of gold coins appeared about 700 B.C.
In the quest for gold by the Phoenicians, Egyptians,
Indians, Hittites, Chinese, and others, prisoners of war were sent to work
the mines, as were slaves and criminals. And this happened during a time when
gold had no value as 'money,' but was just considered a desirable commodity
in and of itself.
The 'value' of gold was accepted all over the world. Today, as in ancient
times, the intrinsic appeal of gold itself has that universal appeal to
humans. But how did gold come to be a commodity, a measurable unit of value? |
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Early miners would use water power to propel gold-bearing sand over the hide
of a sheep, which would trap the tiny, but heavy, flakes of gold. When the
fleece had absorbed all it could hold, this 'golden fleece' was hung up to
dry, and when dry would be beaten gently so that the gold would fall off and
be recovered.
This primitive form of hydraulic mining began thousands of
years ago, and was still being used by some miners as recently as the
California gold rush of 1849.

The first use of gold as money occurred around 700 B.C.,
when Lydian merchants produced the first coins. These were simply stamped
lumps of a 63% gold and 27% silver mixture known as 'electrum.' This
standardized unit of value no doubt helped Lydian traders in their
wide-ranging successes, for by the time of Croesus of Mermnadae, the last
King of Lydia (570 -546 B.C.), Lydia had amassed a huge hoard of gold. Today,
we still speak of the ultra-wealthy as being 'rich as Croesus.' |
Gold, measured out, became money. Gold's beauty, scarcity,
unique density (no other metal outside the platinum group is as heavy), and
the ease by which it could be melted, formed, and measured made it a natural
trading medium. Gold gave rise to the concept of money itself: portable,
private, and permanent. Gold (and silver) in standardized coins came to
replace barter arrangements, and made trade in the Classic period much
easier.
Gold was money in ancient Greece. The Greeks mined for gold throughout the
Mediterranean and Middle East regions by 550 B.C., and both Plato and
Aristotle wrote about gold and had theories about its origins. Gold was
associated with water (logical, since most of it was found in streams), and
it was supposed that gold was a particularly dense combination of water and
sunlight.
Their science may have been primitive, but the Greeks learned much about the
practicalities of gold mining. By the time of the death of Alexander of
Macedon (323 B.C.), the Greeks had mined gold from the Pillars of Hercules
(Gibraltar) all the way eastward to Asia Minor and Egypt, and we find traces
of their placer mines today. Some of the mines were owned by the state, some
were worked privately with a royalty paid to the state. Also, nomads such as
the Scythians and Cimmerians worked placer mines all over the region. The
surviving Greek gold coinage and Scythian jewelry both show superb artistry.
The Roman Empire furthered the quest for gold. The Romans
mined gold extensively throughout their empire, and advanced the science of
gold-mining considerably. They diverted streams of water to mine
hydraulically, and built sluices and the first 'long toms.' They mined
underground, also, and introduced water-wheels and the 'roasting' of
gold-bearing ores to separate the gold from rock. They were able to more
efficiently exploit old mine-sites, and of course their chief laborers were
prisoners of war, slaves, and convicts.
A monetary standard made the world economy possible. The concept of money,
(i.e., gold and silver in standard weight and fineness coins) allowed the
World's economies to expand and prosper. During the Classic period of Greek
and Roman rule in the western world, gold and silver both flowed to India for
spices, and to China for silk. At the height of the Empire (A.D. 98-160),
Roman gold and silver coins reigned from Britain to North Africa and Egypt.
Money had been invented. Its name was gold. |