<65r>

Observations upon the valuation of Gold & Silver in proportion to one another

A Spanish Pistole was coyned for 32 Reaus or four pieces of Eight, & is the sixteenth part of the weight thereof, & of like allay.

A Doppia Moeda or My|o|yder of Portugal was coyned for 4000 Res or ten Crusados, & is the sixteenth part of the weight thereof & of like allay.

Gold is therefore by the standards of Spain & Portugal, of sixteen times more value then silver of like alley & equal weight. And at this rate a Guinea is of equal value with so much fine silver as is conteined in 22s 1d of English money of just weight & allay. And at this rate a Guinea is of Now this high value carrues away the silver from from {sic} Spain as fast as it comes from the West Indies, & the scarcity of silver in that kingdom (& I think also in Portugal) puts them upon making their payments at home in Gold & refusing to pay in Silver without a premium of six per cent. At wch rate a Guinea is worth about 20s. 9d.

In France by the Edict of May 1709 a new Lewidor was coyned for 20 livres or four new Lewises of Silver & is the fifteenth part of the weight thereof & of equal allay. And by the same Edict fine Gold is valued at fifteen times its weight of fine silver. At wch rate a Guinea is worth 20s 8d12 in silver.

In Holland, the Ducat of Holland & \that of/ the Empire is current at five Gilders & five Stivers, that is, at so much fine silver as is conteined in 9s 1d14 English. At wch rate a Guinea is worth 20s7{illeg}\d/12.

At Hannover the Ducat is valued at two old Rix Dollars or four Guldens, that is, at 9s 1d English. And Gold bears \much/ the same proportion to silver in Italy as in Germany.

In England therefore, that Gold & Silver may have the same proportion to one another as in the neighbouring parts of Europe a Guinea should be valued at 20s & 7d{illeg} or 25s 8d or thereabouts; or \at the most/ one pound weight of fine silver & not above \at the most/: whereas one pound weight of fine Gold is at present valued \in England/ at 15£Wt. 6oz. 17dwt of fine silver, whis|c|h is almost 4 per cent too high.

© 2024 The Newton Project

Professor Rob Iliffe
Director, AHRC Newton Papers Project

Scott Mandelbrote,
Fellow & Perne librarian, Peterhouse, Cambridge

Faculty of History, George Street, Oxford, OX1 2RL - newtonproject@history.ox.ac.uk

Privacy Statement

  • University of Oxford
  • Arts and Humanities Research Council
  • JISC