Gold Price Trends & History of Gold – Reliance My Gold Plan
Classical Era
5,000 years ago in Egypt and the Middle East: Gold and other metals
fulfilled the classical function of money (exchange, means of payment, and value
storage). However gold coins were not yet widely used in economic transactions.
In 560 BC, Lydian king Croesus: He was the first to produce standardized
gold coins which were of the same size and value. The minted coins guaranteed, besides
its propaganda function, the value and quality of the precious metal.
In 225 BC, the Roman Empire used the first gold coins: This was
a response to the devaluation of their silver currency, caused by the oversupply
of silver coming from the new Roman colonies. Roman gold coins (Solidus) remained
the dominant currency of Europe, northern Africa and Asia Minor until the beginning
of the 12th century
Middle Ages
In the Middle Ages, silver as preferred coin metal: Gold was more
and more used only as a value storage instead of a means of payment, as this metal
was rarer and more valuable than silver. The crusades and the expanding long-distance
trade helped to reintroduce gold as a means of payment. In Mediaeval Europe gold
had a value of 10 to 12 times that of silver.
In 1300 hallmarking: A system to check and guarantee the quality
of gold was established in London, creating a common standard for gold purity.
In the 14th and 15th century increase of gold value: The reasons
were the decline of European mining, leading to a reduction in new gold supplies.
During the same time, coin production decreased by 80%. This made gold in circulation
rarer, increased the price for this precious metal, and lead to a continuous deflation.
Early Modern Times
Discovery, subjugation and plundering of America: The engagements
in the New World brought large amounts of gold to Europe during the 16th century.
The new gold supply first reversed deflation and later caused inflation in Spain,
later in the rest of Europe, and even in Asia.
Second half of the 16th century, gold coins further lost their value:
This is because gold coins were combined with other metals, such as copper, and
lost its purity. More low-grade coins were brought into circulation due to the Seven
Years War (1756–1763).
Fixed gold-silver conversion rate and gold standard: In the United
Kingdom, Sir Isaac Newton, warden of the Royal Mint, determined the conversion rate
of gold and silver. This helped to ease the big fluctuations of gold coins. In 1774
the British Parliament introduced the gold standard. Here, the strengths of the
currency is determined by the national gold reserves.
Bimetallism of the 18th and early 19th century: Other European
countries and the United States minted at the same time gold and silver coins. The
basis was a fixed conversion rate between these two metals. In France, starting
in 1795, the rate was 15:1, meaning that gold has a 15 times higher value than silver.