-Czechów, comprising 214 silver dirhams issued between 711–712 and 882–883 CE,
Lublin Museum. The word "dirham" ultimately comes from
drachma (δραχμή), the Greek coin. The Greek-speaking
Byzantine Empire lay partially in the
Levant and traded with
Arabia, circulating the coin there in pre-Islamic times and afterward. Near the end of the 7th century the coin became an
Islamic currency bearing the
name of the sovereign and a religious verse. The Arabs introduced their own coins. The Islamic dirham was 8
daniq. The dirham was struck in many
Mediterranean countries, including
Al-Andalus (
Moorish Spain) and the
Byzantine Empire (
miliaresion), and could be used as currency in
Europe between the 10th and 12th centuries, notably in areas with
Viking connections, such as
Viking York and Dublin.
Dirham in Jewish orthodox law The
dirham is frequently mentioned in
Jewish orthodox law as a unit of weight used to measure various requirements in religious functions, such as the weight in silver specie pledged in Marriage Contracts (
Ketubbah), the quantity of flour requiring the separation of the
dough-portion, etc. Jewish physician and philosopher,
Maimonides, uses the Egyptian
dirham to approximate the quantity of flour for
dough-portion, writing in
Mishnah Eduyot 1:2: "And I found the rate of the dough-portion in that measurement to be approximately five-hundred and twenty
dirhams of wheat flour, while all these dirhams are the Egyptian [
dirham]." This view is repeated by
Maran's
Shulhan Arukh (
Hil. Hallah,
Yoreh Deah § 324:3) in the name of the
Tur. In Maimonides' commentary of the Mishnah (
Eduyot 1:2, note 18), Rabbi
Yosef Qafih explains that the weight of each Egyptian
dirham was approximately 3.333 grams, or what was the equivalent to 16
carob-grains which, when taken together, the minimum weight of flour requiring the separation of the dough-portion comes to approx. 1 kilo and 733 grams. Rabbi
Ovadiah Yosef, in his
Sefer Halikhot ʿOlam (vol. 1, pp. 288–291), makes use of a different standard for the Egyptian
dirham, saying that it weighed approx. 3.0 grams, meaning the minimum requirement for separating the
priest's portion is 1 kilo and 560 grams. Others (e.g. Rabbi
Avraham Chaim Naeh) say the Egyptian
dirham weighed approx. 3.205 grams, which total weight for the requirement of separating the dough-portion comes to 1 kilo and 666 grams. Rabbi Shelomo Qorah (Chief Rabbi of
Bnei Barak) wrote that the traditional weight used in
Yemen for each
dirham weighed 3.20 grams for a total of 31.5
dirhams given as the redemption of one's firstborn son (
pidyon haben), or 3.36 grams for the 30
dirhams required by the
Shulhan Arukh (''Yoreh De'ah'' 305:1), and which in relation to the separation of the dough-portion made for a total weight of 1 kilo and 770.72 grams. The word
drachmon (), used in some translations of Maimonides' commentary of the
Mishnah, has in all places the same connotation as
dirham. == Modern-day currency ==