Silver$96750$ - definitie. Wat is Silver$96750$
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Wat (wie) is Silver$96750$ - definitie

MONETARY SYSTEM BASED ON THE VALUE OF SILVER
Silver Standard; Silver metallism; Silver currency; Silver specie; Silver-standard
  • The Spanish silver dollar created a global silver standard from the 16th to 19th centuries.

silver gilt         
  • Silver gilt [[toilet service]] by Johann Jacob Kirstein, 1786
  • [[Sassanid]] silver-gilt shield-boss, 7th century
SILVER GILDED WITH GOLD
Vermeil; Silver gilt; Gilt silver; Gilded silver; Gilt-silver; Médaille Vermeil; Gold vermeil; Silver vermeil; Sterling silver vermeil
¦ noun
1. gilded silver.
2. an imitation gilding of yellow lacquer over silver leaf.
vermeil         
  • Silver gilt [[toilet service]] by Johann Jacob Kirstein, 1786
  • [[Sassanid]] silver-gilt shield-boss, 7th century
SILVER GILDED WITH GOLD
Vermeil; Silver gilt; Gilt silver; Gilded silver; Gilt-silver; Médaille Vermeil; Gold vermeil; Silver vermeil; Sterling silver vermeil
['v?:me?l, -m?l]
¦ noun
1. gilded silver or bronze.
2. literary vermilion.
Origin
ME: from OFr. (see vermilion).
vermeil         
  • Silver gilt [[toilet service]] by Johann Jacob Kirstein, 1786
  • [[Sassanid]] silver-gilt shield-boss, 7th century
SILVER GILDED WITH GOLD
Vermeil; Silver gilt; Gilt silver; Gilded silver; Gilt-silver; Médaille Vermeil; Gold vermeil; Silver vermeil; Sterling silver vermeil
n.
1.
Vermilion.
2.
Bright red.
3.
Silver-gilt, gilt-bronze.

Wikipedia

Silver standard

The silver standard is a monetary system in which the standard economic unit of account is a fixed weight of silver. Silver was far more widespread than gold as the monetary standard worldwide, from the Sumerians c. 3000 BC until 1873. Following the discovery in the 16th century of large deposits of silver at the Cerro Rico in Potosí, Bolivia, an international silver standard came into existence in conjunction with the Spanish pieces of eight. These silver dollar coins played the role of an international trading currency for nearly four hundred years.

The move away from the silver to the gold standard began in the 18th century when Great Britain set the gold guinea’s price in silver higher than international prices on the recommendation of Sir Isaac Newton, attracting gold and putting them on a de facto gold standard. Great Britain formalised the gold standard in 1821 and introduced it to its colonies afterwards. Imperial Germany’s move to the gold standard in 1873 triggered the same move to the rest of Europe and the world for the next 35 years, leaving only China (and, until 1930, the French Indochinese piastre) on the silver standard. By 1935 China and the rest of the world abandoned the silver and gold standards, respectively, in favour of government fiat currencies pegged to the pound sterling or the U.S. dollar.