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[2] which the kings had accumulated unused over a long period of time as a protection against the vicissitudes of Fortune. In addition there were nine thousand talents of minted gold in the form of darics.1

1 Justin 11.14.9 and Plut. Alexander 36.1: coined money) give the same figure as Diodorus; Curtius 5.2.11 and Arrian. 3.16.7 give 50,000 talents. The daric was the standard Persian gold coin with an image of the king on one side depicted as an archer. The name was popularly derived from that of Dareius I, who first minted them (cp. E. S. G. Robinson, Numismatic Chronicle, 18, 1958, 187-193).

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