Zuz (Jewish coin) explained

A Zuz (Hebrew: זוז; plural Hebrew: זוזים zuzim) was an ancient Jewish silver coin struck during the Bar Kokhba revolt as well as a Jewish name for the various types of non-Jewish small silver coinage, used before and after the period of the revolt.[1] The name was used from the Greek era of drachmas, through the Roman era of Denarius, and then as the quarter denomination of Bar Kokhba Revolt coinage. The Jewish insurrectionists' zuzim were overstruck on Imperial denarii or provincial drachmas of the emperors Vespasian, Titus, Domitian, Trajan, and Hadrian. Four zuzim, denarii or drachmas make a shekel, a sela or a tetradrachm.

Etymology

Several different etymologies have been suggested for the word "zuz":

Usage

In the Talmud, the zuz and the dinar are used interchangeably, the difference being that the zuz originally referred to the Greek Drachma (which was a quarter of the Greek Tetradrachm, which weighed approximately 17 grams) while the dinar referred to the later Roman Denarius (which was a quarter of the Tyrian shekels and had the same weight as the Jerusalem Shekels and the Roman provincial Tetradrachms at approximately 14 grams).

The zuz is mentioned in the Haggadah in the Passover song "Chad gadya, chad gadya" ("One little goat, one little goat"); in which the lyric of ("Which Father bought for two zuzim (half shekels)) repeats at the end of every stanza. It may be significant that two zuzim equal the half-shekel tax required of every adult male Israelite in Exodus 30:13.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Instone-Brewer, David. 2007. Traditions of the Rabbis from the Era of the New Testament. P.201
  2. Web site: Bamidbar Rabbah (22:8).
  3. [Marcus Jastrow]
  4. Kaufman . Stephen . 1974 . The Akkadian Influences on Aramaic . Assyriological Studies . 19 . 114 . . August 20, 2013 . January 17, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210117143008/https://oi.uchicago.edu/research/publications/as/19-akkadian-influences-aramaic . dead .
  5. Web site: zuz - Dictionary definition and pronunciation - Yahoo! Education. August 20, 2013.
  6. The Targum Jonathan, the Aramaic paraphrase of First Samuel 9:8, translates the "quarter-shekel" in the original Hebrew into "zuz", making one zuz equal to one-fourth of a Temple shekel (not a "common shekel"—of which a zuz represented one-half, according to some Talmudic mentions), and two zuzim equal to half of a Temple shekel.