Who invented money, and what is the history of money?
The first written records of the use of money date from 1200BC, in the area of land now known as Southern Algeria, although then it was covered with water. Inscriptions in stones record that ‘twelve shekels’ were paid into the bank account belonging to Algar Hammurabi, in return for ‘use of his daughter’. Twelve shekels in today’s money would buy you hundreds of prostitutes, all better looking than Hammurabi’s daughter, who was by all accounts rather dull. But let us not get too carried away, because a monetary system existed long before Hammurabi’s daughter was bought and sold. That was a system known as bartering. Bartering is the word we give to a system known as bartering. This involved exchanging goods rather than paying for them. Bartering was invented in Ancient Egypt around the time of Moses. It meant that, for instance, a bag of potatoes might be swapped for a tin of peaches, or a candle may be swapped for a brown shawl made out of potato sacking, or whatever it was they wore