| Item | Key Features | Notes / Differences |
|---|---|---|
| Credit | Recorded obligations, often in texts | Precedes physical money, primary form of exchange |
| Coinage | Standardized stamped metal, introduced later | Facilitates small, routine transactions |
| Barter | Direct exchange of goods/services | Rarely pure; often social or ritualistic |
| Physical Money | Coins, silver, gold | Standardization for convenience |
Economic Exchange System
├─ Credit / Debt
│ ├─ Recorded in texts (e.g., cuneiform tablets)
│ └─ Settled with goods or services
├─ Money (Metallic Units)
│ ├─ Silver shekel, gold, copper
│ └─ Used as a unit of account and store of value
└─ Coinage
├─ Standardized stamped metal
└─ Introduced for convenience, later than credit systems
This revision sheet emphasizes core facts, structures, relationships, and common misconceptions, tailored for exam preparation.
Test your knowledge on The True Origins of Money with 10 multiple-choice questions with detailed corrections.
1. What role did coinage play in the history of money, according to the evidence presented?
2. According to the revision sheet, which statement accurately describes the relationship between money and debt in early human history?
Memorize the key concepts of The True Origins of Money with 10 interactive flashcards.
Debt — definition?
Quantifiable obligation requiring repayment
Money — origin?
Primarily a credit system, not barter.
Money — role?
Medium of exchange, unit of account, store of value
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