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Michaelaton

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Michaelaton (histamenon) of Michael VII.

The michaelaton (Greek: νόμισμα μιχαηλᾶτον, "coin of Michael"), in Latin michaelatus, was the colloquial name given to the gold Byzantine coins (nomismata) struck by any emperor called Michael.

In a more technical sense, it refers to the gold histamena issued by Emperor Michael IV the Paphlagonian (r. 1034–1041) and, in sources of the late 11th and the 12th centuries, for those of Emperor Michael VII Doukas (r. 1071–1078), whose gold coinage was the last to retain a reasonably high amount of gold (16 carats) before the massive debasement that followed under his successors. It was in widespread use in Italy, especially the south, because it was virtually equal to the popular Sicilian tarì.

Sources

Currencies of the Byzantine Empire
First period
(498 – ca. 700)
Gold
Solidus
Semissis
Tremissis
Silver
Hexagram (from 615)
Copper
Follis
Half-follis
Decanummium
Pentanummium
Nummus
Second period
(ca. 700 – 1092)
Gold
Solidus or Nomisma (later Histamenon)
Tetarteron (from 960s)
Silver
Miliaresion (from 720)
Copper
Follis
Third period
(1092 – ca. 1300)
Gold
Hyperpyron
Electrum
Nomisma trachy aspron (Trikephalon/Manouelaton)
Billon
aspron trachy (Stamenon)
Copper
Tetarteron
Half-tetarteron
Fourth period
(ca. 1300 – 1350s)
Gold
Hyperpyron
Silver
Basilikon
Billon
Tournesion (Politikon)
Copper
Trachy
Assarion
Fifth period
(1367 – 1453)
Silver
Stavraton
Half-stavraton
Doukatopoulon (Aspron)
Copper
Tournesion
Follaro
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