I can't imagine taking a coin out of my mouth when paying anybody. Would the next person who receives the coin then put it in their mouth? At least silver has some antimicrobal qualities--so that may have reduced disease transmission.
Quote: wow! is that a "chunk" of a larger coin or is that pretty much the whole coin?
It's the whole coin!
Quote: My smallest coins is 8mm and I thought that was tiny. For a coin that is only 5mm that is a clear strike.
It's impressive they got that much detail on that little bit of silver--and it was smaller before it was struck! A US dime is huge by comparison--18mm. My smallest modern coin, a Finland Penni is 15mm and 1.28 gram--and I bet kids swallowed them all the time.
Quote: According to Doug's article, they may have been carried in the owner's mouth.
The "literary evidence" Doug cites is the play "The Birds" by Aristophanes. In it, the slave Euelpides confesses that he once "rolled on the ground when I saw a kite, and then on my back, with my mouth open, I swallowed an obol, and had to trail my bag home empty". It's assumed that the only way somebody can swallow a coin just by looking up was if they were carrying coins in their mouth at the time.
There are smaller coins by weight but somewhere we have to allow for wear and tear reducing the total. This .1g coins is thicker than many. My pages also show a hexas of Syracuse that is half as heavy but close to a millimeter larger in diameter. Weight of silver meant everything in that day. The amount of profit to be made counterfeiting coins in good silver was small enough that we don't see a lot of them. Plated coins smaller than drachm size are unusual and I do not own a plated obol but I believe they exist.
One of my dealers had two of what were the smallest gold coins in the world. This was several months ago but if I recall, they must have been 1.5-2 mm wide. I think they were Indian or something. I was pretty surprised to say the least!
They weren't like paper thin or anything; I'd say around as thick as a US dime, maybe just a tad thinner. And they had what looked like Indian script on them I think, but it was so small I could not fully tell.
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