Here’s Where the Dollar Began

It was dark and drizzly outside, and chilly in the way that only Hamburg can be, considering how the strong, damp North Sea wind whips up the Elbe River valley.

I saw the Intercity Express (ICE) train at a distance, as it curved around the final bend into the station and pulled up along the platform.

Helpfully — and with characteristic thoroughness — the online Deutsche Bahn scheduling app informed me where on the platform to stand, so that I would be exactly where the train doors opened for my assigned car.

I stepped aboard, found my seat and within moments was rolling at over 150 miles per hour toward Berlin, with a six-minute window there to catch another train south to Dresden. Which is another way of saying that in Germany, the trains still run on time.

My destination was ground zero for money. Yes, I was headed to where it ALL began — where the entire modern monetary system can trace its roots.

Sure, the idea of money has been around for millennia, since cavemen traded seashells and pretty stones, I suppose.

Or more recently since the days of ancient Greece and her drachmas; since Rome and her denarii. Money seems to be one of those things that comes with the basics of human civilization.

But what about our beloved U.S. dollar, the current global reserve currency? Where did it come from? Who invented it? What’s the DNA of the buck? Well, today I’ll show you…

First, to be perfectly candid, this is no touristic boondoggle. I was on an exploration site visit.

I was in southwest Germany. In Saxony. In Dresden.

And around here is where the story begins, about 900 years ago. But it’s not just cool history.

In fact, many old lessons about money, developed over centuries in this part of Europe, are still valid. They resonate. And routinely, modern governments make dumb monetary mistakes that, in centuries past, cost emperors entire kingdoms.

I was there because Saxony is old mining country, going back 2,400 years according to archaeologists.

Indeed, it makes perfect sense that people mined the ground around here long ago, because southwest Germany is home to a mountain range called the Erzgebirge — the “ore mountains.”

And the first mines in the region predate even the Roman Empire.

Right now, a German group is working out in the field, applying modern exploration techniques to this ancient mining district, and the results are promising. The old-time miners chased high-grade ores, to be sure.

But they lacked the science and technology to get at the lower-grade materials, and there’s still much valuable metal in those hills.

I was there to see and listen, to think and ask questions.

For now, we’re discussing the past because it’s so absolutely fascinating and informative.

Read on to see how the dollar originated in this very place.

The Origins of the Dollar

By Byron King

There’s little doubt that, long ago, more than a few Roman denarii were minted from ores that came from Saxony. Fast-forward past the fall of Rome, through the Dark Ages, and settle into the early 1100s, when miners struck big deposits of silver… along with lead, copper, gold and much else.

As a result, the area we now call Saxony had a mining boom. As you can imagine, people soon arrived to work the mineral deposits, as well as to prospect for more and to do all the other jobs that involve supporting a major development effort.

Meanwhile, at a long-inhabited site along the Elbe River, a small settlement began to grow under the name of Dresden; a word derived from a long-lost language, which scholars say translates as “swamp.”

And not just Dresden. Indeed, with new mines and large amounts of ore from the ground, the entire Saxony region saw the creation and growth of dozens of new, small settlements, key among them the town of Freiberg.

Mining Means Wealth

For a variety of fascinating geological reasons, the Erzgebirge range in Saxony is astonishingly well-endowed with mineral systems.

For several centuries, between the 1100s and about 1500, numerous towns across Saxony mined ores, produced metals, and set up mints to produce coins of varying degrees of fineness. Often as not, both royal and religious personages vied to have their image on the coins as a sign of their political power and prestige. And vast numbers of coins went into circulation.

In the early 1500s, in an area south of Dresden (now called Bohemia, in the Czech Republic), miners discovered a particularly large silver deposit at a site called Joachimsthal; which means “Joachim’s Valley,” in that the word thal translates as valley.

This area yielded enough high-grade silver to change the monetary game, so to speak. That is, local mints were now able to produce large numbers of silver coins with consistent amounts and purities of silver metal.

And these coins came to be called “thalers,” after Joachimsthal.

Indeed, thalers rapidly displaced most other forms of coinage across Saxony, and then across Europe. Merchants traded in thalers, bankers banked them, and governments taxed and budgeted in terms of thalers. They offered such security that people even wrote paper guarantees against them, which is the origin of modern notes and bonds.

The coins themselves were of consistent size and weight, assured fineness, and overall a trustworthy form of money. Thalers took such deep root that even when Spain and Portugal began to sail treasure ships filled with silver back from the New World, their new metal was cast into coinage that resembled thalers; the “piece of eight” being one such example.

Now consider how, with thalers, people had access to a widely used coin, with consistent weight and purity. It was trustworthy. You could trade with it, bank with it, pay your taxes with it, and it was generally accepted in trade everywhere. People even wrote bonds and legal notes against it.

Well, isn’t that something like a universal currency? Something like what we today call the world’s “reserve currency”? Hold that thought…

The Good Fortune of Mining and Minting One’s Own Money

Any government is fortunate to be able to mint its own money, especially if the world will accept it in trade. And such was the good fortune of Saxony over many centuries.

Indeed, Saxony became one of the wealthiest jurisdictions in Europe based on the area’s ability to produce ore from the ground, and then mint coins with images of its kings, queens and religious players on the faces.

Mining towns across Saxony became wealthy, and the seat of central government in Dresden became very, very wealthy. Century after century, successive powers added to the beauty and glory of the place.

Dresden became a treasure chest of a city, “Florence on the Elbe,” as some called it. Rulers and their court supporters built one palace or castle after another, filled with all manner of valuable artwork, along with vast armories stuffed with weapons to keep invaders at bay. (Much of it was destroyed in World War II, another story for another time).

Another way to describe the history in all of this is that Europe’s periods of Renaissance and Baroque were funded in large measure by the mines of Saxony, accounted for in silver thalers. And these thalers created not just modern Western culture, but the underlying monetary system that paid for it all.

Along the way, Saxony became the premier locale in the world for new mining techniques. In 1735, the Mining Academy at Freiberg was established, and it remains today one of the world’s leading institutions for research in its field.

It’s fair to say that Saxony turned mining from a local craft into a new industry, and thus laid the intellectual and engineering foundations for the Industrial Revolution.

Origins of the Dollar

If you have not yet discerned the eventual evolution of thalers, say the word a few times fast, and then utter the word, “dollar.” Because yes, the underlying concept of the thaler is what became the U.S. dollar. Thalers were the model for dollars in terms of size and weight, meaning an ounce of silver.

Indeed, when the newly constituted United States adopted its Constitution in 1787, it was no accident that the drafters declared that the national currency unit would be called the “dollar.”

This was a direct and profound way to reassure the rest of the world that the U.S. would use an internationally established and accepted form of money in trade, banking, and dealings with governments.

It’s worth noting, too, that the U.S. determined to use a continental European monetary standard, the thaler/dollar, versus the British pound. You don’t use your opponent’s money if you can avoid it.

I’ll end it here. I just wanted to share this unique and truly awesome visit I had in a region which literally built the foundation of modern money.

And keep in mind that “wealth” is not just trading electrons and adding up scores on a ledger. That might be accounting or math tricks, but it’s not creating anything new.

Because real wealth involves true creation, adding something new to what’s available to mankind.

One example of wealth creation – among the best examples, I’d argue – is liberating ores and elements from the ground, bringing things to the surface that add to the overall human condition.

The Daily Reckoning