Early Days
For the most part the inhabitants of South
African carried out their extensive trading activities by barter. It is
interesting though that on the coast of Pondoland both Roman and
Egyptian coins dating back 2200 years have been found, as well as
Venetian coins of the 1200’s from the first Portugese explorers.
The Dutch East India Company and the English East India Company
In 1652, when Jan van Riebeeck founded the
settlement at the Cape, the Spanish dollar 8 Real was the basic coin in
use in the Netherlands. The VOC received permission from Spain to use
similar pieces of eight but with different designs for trade with the
East.
In 1681 the guilder and its multiples were
introduced in the Cape. About this time the real was replaced by the
rix-dollar. In 1726 copper doits began to be struck for the VOC as well
as silver ducatoons and guilders.
The English East India Company had also
set into circulation Indian silver rupees as well as gold pagodas and
mohurs. Besides these coins Japanese koban, English guinea, Portuguese
joannes, Russian roubles and several other nationalities’ coins are mentioned in the tariffs.
The First British Occupation
By 1795 there was a perpetual shortage of
small change. The cartwheel pennies of 1797 were introduced in 1800 and
were declared current at two stuivers.
The Batavian Republic
In 1803 the Batavian Republic which had
taken the place of the Dutch East India Company took over the task of
reforming the Cape currency. They proposed the guilder be made the
standard coin of the Cape and legal tender be confined to the ducatoon,
daalder, guilder and doit. The usefulness of British copper had however
by now spread itself through the Colony.
The Second British Occupation
In 1806, to ease the scarcity of small
coins, the ship guilder coins were put into circulation. A further
supply of shillings and pennies were circulated and the Spanish dabloon
of sixteen dollars is mentioned for the first time. Troops continued to
be paid in Spanish dollars.
In Griqualand in 1815 four denominations
of coins were put into circulation. A silver ten and five pence and
bronze half penny and farthing were circulated. However the experiment
was not a success and these were withdrawn. Patterns were later struck
in 1890.
In 1823 the Cape
Colony proposed producing its own coinage. This came to nothing as
British Government planned to put the currency of all its colonies on a
sterling basis. It did this in the Cape with effect from 1826. When the
supply of British coinage was insufficient for paying garrison troops,
other silver coinage such as Spanish dollars, Sicilian dollars, United
State dollars, French francs and Indian rupees were also used. Sydney
mint sovereigns were also declared legal tender.
In Natal there was no official currency
although British gold and silver coins were the primary coins in
circulation. Copper was practically unknown and due to the shortage of
small change stores issued tokens and "good-fors". Indian rupees were
imported from Mauritius, but were not popular.
Before and after the declaration of
independence in 1854 of the Orange Free State, British coinage was
extensively used. Government payments were however often assessed in
rix-dollars. Due to the shortage of small change and extensive use of
the unpopular "good-fors" and tokens, suggestions were made that the
government should have its own metal coinage. This never went any
further. However various patterns of different denominations were made.
In 1900 the coinage of the South African Republic was adopted as legal
tender.
In the Transvaal monetary
transactions were initially in rix-dollars, however the sterling system
was used concurrently and by 1868 exclusively. British currency, tokens
and "good-fors" were used extensively. In 1874 president T.F.Burgers had gold pounds struck which were equivalent
to the British sovereign. By 1890 the Z.A. Republic had decided to have
their own coins struck. Various patterns and proofs of the different
proposals are in existence. In 1892 all denominations equivalent to the British sterling series with Paul Kruger on the reverse was issued.
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