Template:Shecks

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Sheckle or shekel

Sheckle or shekel is an ancient unit of weight or value. especially : a Hebrew unit equal to about 252 grains troy (about 16.3 grams)

2. : a coin weighing one shekel.

A half Sheckle is about 8 grams of silver.

The Hebrew shekel was the 50th part of a mina, and as a weight about 224 grains.

Shekel is any of several ancient units of weight or of currency in ancient Israel, from the Hebrew root ש-ק-ל (ShinKufLamed) meaning 'weigh' (שָׁקַל šaqal 'to weigh', שֶׁקֶל šeqel 'a standard weight'), common with other Semitic languages like Akkadian.

In the first century a shekel was equated with the Greek tetradrachm (equal to four drachms), which was a silver coin of the weight of nearly 14 grams.

A US dime weighs 2.268 grams.

A silver quarter weighs about 6.25 grams. This is because quarters made before 1965 are 90% silver and 10% copper.


Half a shekel therefore would be in the value of nearly 7 grams of silver, and could be equated with the Greek didrachm (equal to two drachms).

What is the value of about 7 grams of stamped silver? The New Testament provides an estimated value of a similar silver coin.