Basilikon - Andronicus II / Michael IX ND (1295-1320) front Basilikon - Andronicus II / Michael IX ND (1295-1320) back
Basilikon - Andronicus II / Michael IX ND (1295-1320) photo

Basilikon - Andronicus II / Michael IX ND

 
Silver 1.65 g 20 mm
Description
Issuer
Byzantine Empire (Byzantine states)
Emperor
Andronikos II Palaiologos (1282-1328) Michael IX Palaiologos (1295-1320)
Type
Standard circulation coin
Years
1295-1320
Value
1 Basilikon
Currency
Second Hyperpyron Nomisma (env. 1300-1367)
Composition
Silver
Weight
1.65 g
Diameter
20 mm
Shape
Round (irregular)
Technique
Hammered
Demonetized
Yes
Updated
2024-10-04
References
Numista
N#228356
Rarity index
87%

Reverse

Andronicus II bearded and Michael IX, each standing facing, wearing crown, saccos and loros, holding labarum between them with circle on shaft below banner

Scripts: Greek, Latin

Lettering: AVTOKPATO PЄC POMAIШN

Translation: Autocrator (Emperor) of the Romans

Comment

The basilikon was introduced shortly before 1304 by Emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos (r. 1282–1328), in direct imitation of the Venetian silver ducat or grosso, chiefly to pay the mercenaries of the Catalan Company. The Byzantine coin closely followed the iconography of the Venetian model, with a seated Christ on the obverse and the two standing figures of Andronikos II and his son and co-emperor Michael IX Palaiologos (r. 1294–1320) replacing St. Mark and the Doge of Venice on the reverse. The similarity was reinforced by the name of the new coin: the ducato, the "coin of the doge", became the basilikon, the "coin of the basileus", although the contemporary Greek sources usually call both doukaton.

The basilikon was of high-grade silver (0.920), flat and not concave (scyphate) as other Byzantine coins, weighing 2.2 grams and officially traded at a rate of 1 to 12 with the gold hyperpyron or two keratia, the traditional rate for Byzantine silver coinage since the days of the hexagram and the miliaresion. The actual rate, however, was usually lower, and fluctuated depending on the changing price of silver: contemporary sources indicate actual rates of 12.5, 13, or 15 basilika to the hyperpyron. Examples of half-basilika are also known to have been minted.

In the 1330s and 1340s, however, the basilikon's weight was much reduced, as a result of a silver shortage affecting all of Europe and the Mediterranean, falling to 1.25 grams by the late 1340s. It ceased to be struck in the 1350s, and was replaced circa 1367 with the new, heavier stavraton.

* Description taken from Wikipedia.

Interesting fact

One interesting fact about the Basilikon coin is that it was used as a means of exchange in the Byzantine Empire during a time of great economic and political change. The coin was issued during the joint reign of Andronicus II and Michael IX, who implemented a number of reforms aimed at stabilizing the empire's economy and strengthening its military. Despite these efforts, the empire continued to face challenges, including inflation and territorial losses. The Basilikon coin, made of silver and weighing 1.65 grams, was a symbol of the empire's resilience and determination to maintain its economic and political power.