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TALENT

Volume 18 · 511 words · 1797 Edition

signifies both a weight and a coin very common among the ancients, but very different among different nations.

The common Attic talent of weight contains 60 Attic mines, or 6000 Attic drachms; and weighed, according to Dr Arbutnott, 56 lbs. 11 oz. 17½ gr. English troy weight. There was another Attic talent, by some said to consist of 80, by others of 100 mines. The Egyptian talent was 80 mines; the Antiochian also 80; the Ptolemaic of Cleopatra 80½; that of Alexandria 90; and the Intial talent 120. In the valuation of money, the Grecian talent, according to Dr Arbutnott, was equal to 60 mines, or reckoning the mina at L. 3 : 4 : 7, equal to L. 193, 15: The Syrian talent in this valuation consisted of 15 Attic mines; the Ptolemaic of 20; the Antiochian of 60; the Euboic of 60; the Bablyonic of 70; the Greater Attic of 80; the Tyrian of 80; the Eginean of 100; the Rhodian of 100; and the Egyptian of 80 mines.

There is another talent much more ancient, which Dr Arbutnott calls the Homeric talent of gold, which seems to have weighed six Attic drachms or three darics, a daric weighing very little more than a guinea. According to this talent, some reckon the treasure of king David, particularly that mentioned 1 Chron. xxii. 14, which, according to the common reckoning, would amount in gold talents to the value of L. 547,500,000, and the silver to above L. 342,000,000; or, reckoning according to the decuple proportion of gold to silver, the two sums would be equal. As David reigned in Judaea after the siege of Troy, it is not improbable but Homer and he might use the same numeral talent of gold.

Among the Romans there were two kinds of talents, the little and the great talent: the little was the common talent; and whenever they say simply talentum, they are to be understood of this. The little talent was 60 minae or Roman pounds; the mina or pound estimated at 100 drachmas or denarii: it was also estimated at 24 great sesterces, which amounted to 60 pounds.

The great talent exceeded the leu by one-third part. Budæus computes, that the little talent of silver was worth L. 75 Sterling, and the greater L. 99 : 6 : 8 Sterling. The greater of gold was worth L. 1125 Sterling.

as a species or money, among the Hebrews, was Talissotus was sometimes used for a gold coin, the same with the shekel of gold, called also stater, and weighing only 4 drachms.

The Hebrews reckoned by these talents as we do by pounds, &c. Thus a million of gold, or million of talents of gold, among them, was a million of shekels or nummi; the nummus of gold being the same weight with the shekel, viz. four drachms.

But the Hebrew talent weight of silver, which they called cicar, was equivalent to that of 3000 shekels, or 113 lb. 10 oz. 1 dwt. 10½ gr. English Troy weight, according to Arbutinot's computation.