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Units of Account in Gold and Silver in Seventh-Century England: Scillingas, Sceattas and Pæningas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2010

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Abstract

Type
Erratum
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 2010

doi:10.1017/S0003581510000089

Regrettably, there is one substantial factual error in the text of this article (Hines Reference Hines2010): the figure quoted (page 156) as the sum paid in compensation for the death of the West Saxon prince Mul by Wihtred of Kent in the 690s was mistranscribed from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as ccc mil. (300,000) when it should have been xxx mil. (30,000). This difference does not affect the key arguments of the paper, as summarized in the abstract, although the implications of that particular transaction are of course very different when considered comparatively (pp 161 and 169).

On page 156 (lines 8–9) the correct figures are as stated above. On page 161, paragraph 2, the fourth sentence should correctly read:

A 30,000-sceatt/pæning compensation payment for the death of Mul should not properly be described as a regular wergild, as our sources imply there was no such thing for a king or prince (cyning or æþeling) at this date; 1,500 Kentish scillingas or 6,000 West Saxon scillingas would, however, be exactly five times the stipulated nobleman’s wergild, suggesting, plausibly, that the sum paid in settlement was based upon the norms prescribed in the law-codes.

In the next sentence but one (on Myrcna laga) all the figures should correspondingly be reduced by a factor of 10 (30,000 sceattas; 250 sceattas to the pound; 4.166 sceattas to the scilling), within a statement that otherwise remains the same. The supposedly comparable compensation payment recorded by Gregory of Tours noted in footnote 38 on page 161 is now much higher than this sum. A conceivable alternative is that the figure of 30,000 itself refers to scillingas, which would then in fact be the equivalent of 10,000 solidi. There is, then, the problem of what exactly scilling could refer to in the 690s. This underlines the point that a gold standard for social payments would have become an awkward instrument by the end of the seventh century in England.

On page 169 I referred to the newly found Staffordshire Hoard. The point stressed there – that both the exact quantity and in particular the fineness of the gold and silver in the hoard have yet to be precisely measured – remains crucial. Even so, the compensation payment for Mul would now be inferred to have been 1.95kg of gold or its equivalent, not 19.5kg – and thus is less, not more, than the contents of the hoard.

I should also have cited Stewart Lyon’s 1969 paper, ‘Historical problems of Anglo-Saxon coinage: III. Denominations and units’ (British Numismatic Journal, 38, 204–22), and discussed his interpretation of the sceatt. I intend to do so thoroughly in a long-planned supplementary paper undertaking a review of the origins and history of the terminology of monetary units in Anglo-Saxon England.

References

Hines, J 2010. ‘Units of account in gold and silver in seventh-century England: scillingas, sceattas and pæningas, Antiq J, 90, 153173CrossRefGoogle Scholar