The American Numismatic Society
and
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Invite You to Visit

Drachmas, Doubloons, and Dollars:
The History of Money



Money makes the world go round. Money makes the man, and money answers all things. Even time is money. We use it every day, we talk about it every day, but it remains hard to define what it is and how it works.

This exhibition will show you the different shapes of money: coins, cowrie shells, salt, tokens, gold, paper money, credit cards and many more. It illustrates how money is first and foremost a way to store wealth and make payments. It makes trade easier and lets governments, merchants, and individuals pay their debts. But money is much more than just an economic object.

Every coin and paper bill can be a work of art, a political messenger, or a piece of jewelry. By looking at the money of many cultures and periods, we not only learn about their histories and attitudes, but we also gain a better understanding of how our own money works and what it says about our own culture and history.

Since at least the Renaissance, coins have attracted large numbers of collectors. Today millions of people all over the world-poor and rich-collect coins, medals or paper money. Individually, coins allow you to hold a piece of history in your own hand. Sometimes, we even know intriguing details about the person who used a coin or what it bought. More commonly, a coin is a silent witness. But, whether worn, fresh from the mint or cut, it shows us that someone in the past used or cared for it.

The American Numismatic Society and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York together invite you to visit this exhibition and learn more about the fascinating history of money.

   

Location:   The Federal Reserve Bank of New York

33 Liberty Street
Hours: 10 to 4, Monday to Friday

Contents:
Case 1: Ancient Greece and the Mediterranean World
Case 2: Ancient Rome
Case 3: Medieval Byzantine and Islamic Empires
Case 4: The Medieval West
Case 5: Ancient and Medieval East and South Asia
Case 6: New Sources: The 15th and 16th Centuries
Case 7: Europe in Transformation: The 17th Century
Case 8: The Enlightenment: The 18th Century
Case 9: Early America
Case 10: African Money
Case 11: East and South Asia in the 19th Century
Case 12: Empires and Colonialism in the 19th Century
Case 13: Moving West: 19th Century
Case 14: Coins of the World
Case 15: The United States in the 20th Century
Case 16: The Art of the Medal
Case 17: The Future of Money
Case 18: U.S. Treasures of the American Numismatic Society
Case 19: Manhattan Money
Case 20: Paper Currency of the World


Resources
ANS Web-site
FRB-NY Web-site

Opening remarks by Alan Greenspan, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.

Coverage by CoinWorld

Review from Archaeology Magazine

Find other web-sites at Coin.Net