Lithuanian long currency
The so-called Lithuanian long currency was a type of money used by the Baltic tribes and in the early Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 12th–15th centuries. It was commodity money in the form of silver ingots. Most often they were semicircular rods about in length and weighted between. Other trading centers, notably Kievan Rus' and Veliky Novgorod, developed their own version of such ingots which are known as grivna or grzywna. The ingots were replaced by minted coins in the middle of the 15th century.
Terminology
The currency was mentioned already by Tadeusz Czacki and Simonas Daukantas. In 1932, Povilas Karmaza published an extensive study on a hoard found in Ribiškės. He measured, weighted, and classified about 400 pieces of semicircular cast ingots, but this work was limited to this one hoard. G. Federov was the first to attempt to create a classification system and topography of the findings to date. This work was still confused and incomplete. In 1981, Zenonas Duksa published a comprehensive study on coins and ingots that circulated before the advent of local coin minting. Though many discoveries were made since then, it remains the standard reference work on the subject.The currency is known by a great variety of terms and there is no clear consensus among researchers which of them is most appropriate:
- Ilgasis : from the Lithuanian word ilgas meaning long.
- Kapa: from kopa, a unit of measurement equal to 60.
- Grivina: from Slavic grzywna
- Rublis: from Slavic ruble. Half ruble is also known as poltina.
- Izroj : from inscription found on one of the ingots.
Forged predecessors
Spiral bracelets are made of a thin strip of silver coiling around three to seven times. The items are well made, decorative. Only one example is known from Lithuania. It is not known when and where the bracelet was found, but it is kept at the National Museum of Lithuania. The coil goes around 4.5 times. It weighs and measures in diameter. Such items are a lot more common in Gotland, but they are also found in Poland, Germany, Finland. They are dated to the 10th century.
Ribbon ingots are made of broader rectangular strip of silver. They are either a straight stick or a small spiral tube. They are roughly made, with clear signs of forging, not decorative. They are more commonly found in Gotland with a few artifacts known from southern Sweden, Poland, and Latvia. They are dated to the 11th century. In Lithuania, they were found in five locations: Gudai, Mažeikiai District, Įpiltis, Kretinga District, Joniškis, Ramygala, and Ruseiniai, Kėdainiai District.
Band ingots are very similar to a bracelet. Only one example is known from Lithuania : a rectangular strip of silver is decorated from the outside with groves and raised dots. It was found in a goldsmith's grave in Graužiai, Kėdainiai District during an archaeological excavation of a grave field in 1938. It weighs. Similar items were also found in Old Prussia and in Livonia. No equivalent items are found elsewhere; therefore, archaeologists believe it was a local Baltic invention. They are dated to the first half of the 12th century.
Cast currency
Irregular cast silver ingots circulated from about 11th to early 12th centuries. Only one such example is known from Lithuania, found in 1938 in Graužiai. Around the second half of the 12th century, supply of minted Western European coins dried up and there was no centralized power in Eastern Europe to take up coin mintage. The period is known as "coinless period". However, merchants needed a means of exchange. Therefore, a local system of cast silver ingots was developed. While silver was imported, the ingots were cast locally. At first, a wax model was created. Then it was coated with clay and fired in a furnace inside a clay or sand pit. The wax would melt leaving a mold for the ingot. Molten silver was poured into the mold using a special clay scoop. After cooling off, the mold was broken to remove the ingot. Therefore, most molds were one-time use though a few examples of ingots are known that were cast using the same mold. Because of this technique, archaeologists have not discovered any furnaces or molds, only clay spoons and pouring cups.Semicircular ingots
Semicircular cast ingots are by far the most popular. As of 1981, there some 800 items found in 40 different locations. All ingots found in Lithuania were discovered accidentally; only in 1985 the first ingots were found during an archaeological excavation in Kernavė. Since then more discoveries were made. With the invention of metal detectors and subsequent rise of illegal archaeology, new discoveries are made almost annually, but rarely enter academic circles. The largest discovery was made by a farmer plowing his fields in Ribiškės in 1930. Many items were looted by the locals before Povilas Karmaza made an inventory. In total, there were about 530 Lithuanian longs, 9 Novgorod and 19 Kiev grivnas – with a combined weight of about.Three-edged ingots
Three-edged ingots is a rare and late sub-type of Lithuanian longs. They are found full or cut in half. As of 1981, they were found in seven locations in a triangle between Kaunas, Vilnius, and Alytus and in Kretinga. In total, 38 ingots were found – 5 full and 33 cut in half. In 2002, half of a three-edged ingot was found in the Lower Castle of Vilnius. In 2010, 52 full and 4 half ingots were found in Grigaičiai near Naujoji Vilnia. In 2004 and 2007, the Money Museum of the Bank of Lithuania acquired two halfs of three-edged ingots. One of them is particularly interesting as it is countermarked with what appears to be a crown inside a circular rope border. In 2002 and 2003, the first three-edged ingots were found outside of Lithuania: 9 halfs in Palačany and 10 halfs plus 1 full bar in Litva villages in Maladzyechna Raion, Belarus.The three-edged ingots are most often found together with earliest coins minted in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and with Prague groschens – coins that circulated in the late 14th and early 15th centuries. Chemical analysis of three such ingots revealed that they were of very high quality. The Money Museum analyzed the two halfs in its possession and found 91.5% and 97.7% silver content. A 2010 analysis of a half ingot kept in a local museum in Kernavė revealed silver content of 97.05–97.11%. Researchers proposed that three-edged ingots appeared as a result of a monetary reform in response to the declining quality of semicircular ingots. Also, it is likely that the weight was adjusted to match Prague groschens: 50 groschens weighed about.
The three-edged ingots share many similarities with Novgorod three-edged grivnas, but archaeologist Duksa identified three main differences:
- Weight: Lithuanian triangular ingots are lighter than Novgorod counterparts
- Shape: Lithuanian ingots are thicker than Novgorod counterparts
- Markings: Lithuanian ingots lack cuts, stamps, writing, or other markings