bullion
(noun)
Gold bars, silver bars, and other bars or ingots of precious metal used as currency.
(noun)
Gold bars, silver bars, and other precious metals bars or ingots.
Examples of bullion in the following topics:
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The Economy under the Ming Dynasty
- The economy of the Ming dynasty was characterized by extreme inflation, the return to silver bullion, and the rise of large agricultural markets.
- The early Ming dynasty attempted to use paper currency, with outflows of bullion limited by its ban on private foreign commerce.
- As their purity and exact weight varied, they were treated as bullion and measured in tael.
- Excessive luxury and decadence marked the late Ming period, spurred by the enormous state bullion of incoming silver and by private transactions involving silver.
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Inadequate Currency
- It also repealed the statutory provisions allowing silver bullion to be presented to the Mint and returned in the form of circulating money.
- Bland, sought the passage of bills to allow depositors of silver bullion to receive it back in the form of coin.
- Allison, did not reverse the 1873 provisions, but required the Treasury to purchase a minimum of $2 million of silver bullion per month.
- The profit, or seignorage, from monetizing the silver was to be used to purchase more silver bullion.
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Ivory Carving
- Ivory carving has a special importance to medieval art history of Europe and Byzantium because it has no bullion value and is not easily recycled like precious metals or jewels.
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The Economy and the Silver Solution
- Free silver advocates wanted the mints to accept silver on the same principle, so that anyone would be able to deposit silver bullion at a Mint and in return receive nearly its weight in silver dollars and other currency.
- In addition to the $2 million to $4 million that had been required by the Bland-Allison Act of 1878, the U.S. government was now required to purchase an additional 4.5 million ounces of silver bullion every month.
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Types of Currency
- Some bullion coins such as the Australian Gold Nugget and American Eagle are legal tender, but they trade based on the market price of the metal content as a commodity, rather than their legal tender face value (which is usually only a small fraction of their bullion value).
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Mediterranean Trade and European Expansion
- Several European mines were exhausted; the lack of bullion leading to the development of a complex banking system to manage the risks in trade.
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Bankers and Lawyers
- Many blamed the economic turmoil on the banks' irresponsibility in funding rampant speculation and issuing excessive paper money unbacked by bullion reserves.
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Ivory Carving in the Early Byzantine Empire
- This art form has a special importance to the history of Byzantine art because it has no bullion value and is not easily recycled like precious metals or jewels.
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Confederate Finances
- The Confederate economy also relied on voluntary donations of coins and bullion from private individuals in support of the Confederate cause; these were initially quite substantial, but became scarce by the end of 1861.
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Economic Conditions
- Free silver advocates wanted the mints to accept silver on the same principle, so that anyone would be able to deposit silver bullion at a Mint and in return receive nearly its weight in silver dollars and other currency.