Zygostates (Byzantine official)

The zygostates (Greek: ζυγοστάτης, "one who weighs with a balance"; plural: ζυγοστάται, zygostatai) was a public weigher of the coinage of the Byzantine Empire.[1][2] According to the Lex Julia, he was a municipal official whose function was to verify the quality of the gold solidus coins.[1][3]

Description

The term zygostates often appears in inscriptions and papyri of the late Roman Empire in the form of zygostates tes poleos (Greek: ζυγοστάτης τῆς πόλεως, "public weigher of the city").[1] The Byzantine emperor Justinian I (r. 527–565) regarded the zygostatai, in his 11th Edict, as the main offenders in changing the purity of gold coins.[1] Some imperial seals bearing the name of zygostatai are preserved from the 6th and 7th centuries AD.[1] In the Taktika of the 9th and 10th centuries AD, the zygostates is a state, rather than urban, functionary belonging to the staff of the sakellion.[1][2][4] The epithet "imperial" is granted to the zygostates on a Byzantine seal dating to the 7th century AD.[1] Based on this evidence, John Bagnell Bury surmised that in the 7th century the zygostates began to examine and weigh coins that came to the Byzantine imperial treasury.[1] The Byzantine Greek monk and abbot, Theodore the Studite, described the zygostasia, or the imperial station where the zygostatai worked, as a profitable business.[1] As for Christopher of Mytilene, he praised a zygostates named Eustathios as the founder of a church and "one of the great chartoularioi".[1]

The term zygastikon (Greek: ζυγαστικόν), attested in a false privilege granted to the city of Monemvasia in 1316, refers to one of the customary payments made to toll inspectors for measuring and weighing wares.[1] On a functional level, the zygastikon had nothing in common with the zygostates of the sakellion.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Kazhdan 1991, "Zygostates", p. 2232.
  2. 1 2 Laiou 2002, Cecile Morrisson, "Byzantine Money: Its Production and Circulation", p. 913: "Finally, the zygostates, the controller of the weight and quality of the imperial coinage, was dependent on the office of the sakellion."
  3. See also Cod. Just. X.73.2.
  4. Laiou 2002, Nicolas Oikonomides, "The Role of the Byzantine State in the Economy", p. 993.

Sources

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