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Rai stones

A rai stone (Yapese: raay),[1] or fei stone,[2] is one of many large artifacts that were manufactured and treasured by the native inhabitants of the Yap islands in Micronesia. They are also known as Yapese stone money or similar names.

A large (approximately 8 feet in height) example of Yapese stone (Rai) in the village of Gachpar

The typical rai stone is carved out of crystalline limestone and shaped like a disk with a hole in the center. The smallest may be 3.5 centimetres (1.4 in) in diameter. The largest extant stone is located on Rumung island, near the Riy village; it is 3.6 metres (12 ft) in diameter and 50 centimetres (20 in) thick, and weighs 4,000 kilograms (8,800 lb).[3][4]

Rai stones were quarried on several of the Micronesian islands, mainly Palau,[5] but briefly on Guam as well. The practice stopped in the early 20th century. Today around 6,000 large rai stones are outstanding on the island,[clarification needed] and several can be seen in museums worldwide.[6][7]

The stones were highly valued by the Yapese and used for important ceremonial gifts. The ownership of a large stone, which would be too difficult to move, was established by its history as recorded in oral tradition rather than by its location. Appending a transfer to the oral history of the stone thus effected a change of ownership.[3]

Modern economists have viewed Rai stones as a form of money and are often used as an example to support the thesis that the value of some form of money can be assigned purely through a shared belief in said value.[3][8]

Names

Originally the name "rai" was used in the northern part of Yap and "fei" in the southern part. The names are also transcribed as "rei" and "fai", respectively, and are often capitalized. In Palau, the stones are called palan.[2] In the 20th century, the name "fei" fell into disuse.[3]

The name "rai" could mean "whale" in Yapese. This may be a reference to one of the origin legends, in which the first stones were shaped like fish.[9]

Physical description

 
Rai stone at the Hamburg Ethnology Museum

Rai stones are approximately round, although some more recent ones are rather elongated.[10][11] In the best-worked ones, the thickness gradually decreases from the center to the rim or in two or three steps. The central hole has about 1/6 of the diameter of the stone. Sometimes there are additional holes off center.[10][12] The diameter varies from 3.5 centimetres (1.4 in) to 3.6 metres (12 ft), but most are between 30 and 50 centimetres (12 and 20 in).[3]

The stones are made of light-colored crystalline rock consisting of calcium carbonate. Stones with brown or white streaks were particularly prized.[10] Weathered stones are dull gray.[12] Earlier reports incorrectly state that the material is aragonite, the most common mineral in coral and sea shells and in rocks derived thereof. Modern analysis revealed that the mineral is, in fact calcite.[13][14][9]

The stone occurs in Palau as deposits slowly formed on the walls of some caves by percolating rainwater (speleothems, specifically flowstones). Tectonic activity millions of years ago lifted limestone deposits out of the sea, eroded by rainwater, forming a typical cave-riled karst geology.[15]

Use and value

Rai stones were, and still are,[16] used in rare important social transactions, such as marriage, inheritance, political deals, sign of an alliance, ransom of the battle dead, or, rarely, in exchange for food.[citation needed] Many are placed in front of meetinghouses, around village courts, or along pathways.

Although the ownership of a particular stone might change, the stone itself is rarely moved due to its weight and risk of damage. Thus the physical location of a stone was often not significant: ownership was established by shared agreement and could be transferred even without physical access to the stone. Each large stone had an oral history that included the names of previous owners. In one instance, a large rai being transported by canoe and outrigger was accidentally dropped and sank to the sea floor. Although it was never seen again, everyone agreed that the rai must still be there, so it continued to be transacted as any other stone.[16]

The perceived value of a specific stone was based on its size, craftsmanship, and history. The value could depend, for instance, on whether a famous sailor brought it or whether people died during its transport.[citation needed]

History

Origin legends

The story of the origin of the rai stones survives only in Yapese oral legends.

According to one version, about 500–600 years ago[9] Anagumang, a Yapese from Tomil island, was instructed by the divinity Le-gerem to travel by boat with seven companions to the mythical island of Magaragar south of Palau, where they found a sparkling stone. According to some variants, the stones were first cut in various shapes, such as fish, lizard, turtle, or crescent moon. But eventually, they settled for the shape of a full moon, with a hole at the center for transport.[3][17][18] In another version, the discovery expedition was headed by Anagumang and a Fatha'an from Yap's Rull island.[19]

A different legend attributes the discovery to chance by a group of fishermen driven to Palau by a storm. According to one variant, they fashioned a fish from the local sparking stone and took it to the king of Rull as a substitute for the fish they failed to catch.[3]

A separate legend tells that before the Palau quarries were discovered, the inhabitants of the village of Talangeth on Map island attempted to make rai stones from the local quartzite rock, but the attempts were abandoned due to clan wars.[10][3][20]

Archaeological and anthropological evidence

 
Map of Yap, Palau, and nearby islands

It is unknown how long the rai stones have been used in Yap. Flat rocks up to 2000 years old have been found there, but the oldest does not resemble today's rai stones, and how they were used is not known.[3]

An alternative hypothesis for the origin of rai stones is that they may have evolved from smaller carved beads.[3] Two disks (without holes) measuring 3.5 centimetres (1.4 in) and 11.2 centimetres (4.4 in) were found and radiocarbon-dated 1636±200 and 1756±200 respectively. However, the relationship between these objects and the rai stones is unclear.[21]

Calcite speleothems do not occur on the Yap islands, which consist mostly of metamorphic rock rather than limestone. However, there are small veins of marble, a crystalline calcite rocks of metamorphic origin, that has a sparkling appearance similar to that of the Palau flowstones. It has been conjectured that the Yapese originally came to value crystalline calcite from these sources before discovering the much more abundant deposits in the Palau caves.[14]

Archaeologists have identified quarries used by the Yapese in a relatively small region of Palau, spanning the southern end of Babeldaob and the northern part of Koror. Some rai stones were found elsewhere in Palau, but the quarries, if any, had not been found as of 2006. Excavations were carried out at the quarries of Omis Cave on the island of Oreor, Chelechol ra Orrak and Upper Orrak on the island of Orrak, and Metuker ra Bisech on the island of the same name. The first two sites, caves/coves that open on the beach, appear to have been exploited before contact with Europeans, although the dates could not be determined. The other two sites are located uphill, some distance from the beach. Quarrying at Metuker ra Bisech appears to have started only around 1700 CE, after the Yapese acquired iron tools. A large stone (3.5 m diameter, 20 cm thick) that apparently broke while being removed from the quarry at Metuker ra Bisech was abandoned on the spot.[9]

Native manufacture

 
Rai stones with carrying logs, 1903

Rai stone production was well developed by the 19th century. Expeditions to Palau, consisting of tens of young men authorized or commanded by a village chief, would last up to several years and could result in the death of members at the quarries or during the sea voyage. According to some accounts, on their return, the largest stones and 2/5 of the smaller ones were handed over to the chief, and the men were rewarded with baskets of taro.[10][11]

Palau lies 400 km west of Yap on a straight line. According to later oral accounts from Yap and Palau, the Yapese first mined on the small island of Magaragár (Ngaragasemiěg), because they were afraid to land on the larger nearby island of Peleliu. Eventually the Palau natives gave the Yapese permission to quarry, in exchange for heavy labor and a few other items they brought from Yap. A report from 1903 claims that a large paved road in the island of Koror was built by the Yapese.[3]

In the quarries, the stones were cut out from the wall deposits of calcite as rough upright disks. It seems that they were then propped up against natural or artificial walls for shaping, finishing and polishing. The rough work appears to have been done with pickaxes or adzes, with blades 1 to 3 cm wide, made of stone or of the shell of large clams such as Tridacna.[3][13][22] According to oral traditions, the central hole was made with a coral reef stone used as a "fire drill", presumably a large bow drill.[13] (While the clam shells and coral are made of calcium carbonate too, they consist of the aragonite form, which is harder than the stone's calcite (3.5–4.0 and 3.0 in the Mohs hardness scale, respectively).

The expeditions traveled to Palau by canoes. On the return, the stones could be carried by canoe or (for the larger specimens) on bamboo rafts. Since the raft was slow and poorly steerable, it was usually let loose in advance to be carried towards Yap by sea currents, while the men left some time later in canoes, on its pursuit. This return route could be more than 1000 km long. The expedition would eventually recover the raft in the vicinity of Yap and tow it to the islands. Stones were often lost at sea. These methods of transport apparently limited the diameter of stones to 2 metres or less and 2 tons of weight.[3]}[23]

It is reported that the stones were transported on land by inserting a log or bamboo through the hole, which was carried on the shoulders of several men.[10] Carried this way, the largest stones would have needed hundreds of men to transport, suggesting the more likely possibility that the largest stones were rolled, akin to wheels on an axle.

European discovery

The earliest reports by western Jesuits of what could be the Yapese rai stones date from the early 1700s.[24][3]

A report of a European expedition in 1815–1818 mentions that the Yap islands produce "grinding stones", that are used by chieftains as thrones, with one stone serving as seat and another as the back rest.[3] The first clear report of a rai stone is from a British ship log entry dated 23 August 1843. The ship carried a delegation from Palau, headed by chieftain Abba Thulle, who was delivering a 60 centimetres (24 in) rai stone as a diplomatic gift to the "prime minister" of Yap and a cadre of Tomil chieftains. The ship's captain Andrew Cheyne notes that the stone was highly valued since it could be found only in the mountains of Palau. While referring to the stone as a "gift of money", Andrew did not mention seeing any other rai stone during his stay at Yap. His commercial agent Alfred Tetens reported in his memoirs that, in 1865, he transported ten Yapese from Palau to Yap, who were carrying 20 large blocks and many smaller ones, a few cm in diameter, to be used as currency.[3]

Manufacturing after European contact

Contact with Europeans in the 19th century first provided the Yapese at Palau with iron tools, that made the cutting and shaping of the stones much easier. Not much later, the Yapese made deals with Europeans to use their ships to transport the stones back to Yap. These arrangements enabled the manufacture of much larger and heavier rai stones, up to 4 meters in diameter, as well of a larger number of them. However, these "modern" stones were less valuable than more ancient ones.[3]

In 1871, the Irish-American David Dean O'Keefe was shipwrecked near Yap and was helped by the natives. Later, he assisted the Yapese in acquiring rai stones and in return received copra and trepang, which were valuable exports in the Far East.[25] The book His Majesty O'Keefe is the story of his life on Yap.[26] A film of the same name starring Burt Lancaster was made in 1954.[27]

End of manufacture

The trade for rai stones eventually stopped at the beginning of the 20th century due to trade disputes between Spanish and German interests in the area. Quarries were abandoned. When Imperial Japanese forces took over Yap during World War II, they used some of the stones for construction or as anchors.[citation needed]

Although modern currency has replaced the stones as everyday currency, the rai stones are still exchanged in traditional ways between the Yapese. They are a national symbol and are depicted on local license plates.

Economic interpretation

In a 1991 paper, economist Milton Friedman argued that while the Yap system of immobile money might seem bizarre at first glance, it was not so different from the operation of the gold vault of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which can pay gold from one government to another without the gold ever leaving the vault. Demands by the government of France for such payment from the United States in 1932 contributed to a nationwide bank panic, proving that industrialized countries could fall under the sway of economic rituals as surely as the Yap islanders.[8]

A 2022 study by a non-economist, Jo Lindsay Walton a Research Fellow in Arts, Climate and Technology at the University of Sussex, claims inconsistencies, errors and omissions in many Western economic accounts of stone money, including Friedman's, asserting that when "Yap has appeared in Western political economy, the lessons which authors draw often reflect their position in intellectual and political disputes which are not principally rooted in Yapese history or economics."[28]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ "Raay2". Yapese Dictionary. Updated 27 July 2012. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  2. ^ a b Rainbird, 2004.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Gillilland, Cora Lee C. (1975). The Stone Money of Yap. A Numismatic Survey. (Smithsonian Studies in History and Technology 23). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 75.
  4. ^ "Rai of Yap – the stone money". Wondermondo. 13 November 2011.
  5. ^ G. S. Parsonson (1962). "The Settlement of Oceania: An Examination of the Accidental Voyage Theory". Journal of the Polynesian Society, Auckland University. Retrieved 19 September 2016. The natives of Yap in Micronesia went 300 miles to the Palau Islands for "stone money", great calcite disks, six to twelve feet in diameter.
  6. ^ Patterson, Carolyn Bennett, et al. "At the Birth of Nations: In the Far Pacific". National Geographic Magazine, October 1986, page 498. National Geographic Virtual Library.
  7. ^ . AiraiState.com. Archived from the original on 20 August 2013.
  8. ^ a b Friedman, Milton (1991). "The Island of Stone Money". Working Papers in Economics. E-91-3. from the original on 3 November 2021. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d Scott M. Fitzpatrick et al. (2006).
  10. ^ a b c d e f Muller, 1917.
  11. ^ a b Beauclair, 1963.
  12. ^ a b Furness, 1910.
  13. ^ a b c Scott M. Fitzpatrick (2001): "Archaeological investigation of Omis Cave: a Yapese stone money quarry in Palau". Archaeology of Oceania, volume 36, pages 153–162.
  14. ^ a b Bosiljka Glumac and Scott Fitzpatrick (2020), "Yapese stone money: Local marble as a potential inspiration for producing limestone exchange valuables in Palau, Micronesia". Chapter of Cultures of Stone: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Materiality of Stone, ISBN 978-90-8890-893-4, pages 65–78.
  15. ^ Scott M. Fitzpatrick (2013), "An Archaeological Study on the Extraction of Flowstone from Caves and Rockshelters for Producing Stone Money in Western Micronesia". Cave and Karst sciences, volume 30, issue 2, pages 75–82.
  16. ^ a b Goldstein, Jacob; Kestenbaum, David. "The Island of Stone Money". NPR.org. NPR. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
  17. ^ William Armand Less (1981). More Tales from Ulithi Atoll: A Content Analysis]. University of California, Berkeley. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-520-09615-8.
  18. ^ Pine, Art (29 March 1984). "Fixed Assets, or Why a Loan in Yap is Hard to Roll Over". The Wall Street Journal. p. A1. reprinted in Mankiw, N. Gregory. Essentials of Economics, Third Edition. Mason: South-Western, 2004. pp. 454–455
  19. ^ Fitzpatrick and McKeon (2019).
  20. ^ Robert D. Leonard (1993), "The Stone Money Of Yap". Quarterly Journal of the Central States Numismatic Society, volume 41, issue 1, pages 31–34.
  21. ^ E. W. Gifford and D. S. Gifford (1959): "Archaeological Excavations in Yap", Anthropological Records, volume 18, issue 2, pages 149–224.
  22. ^ Alfred F. Pawlik, Philip J. Piper, Rachel E. Wood, Kristine Kate A. Lim, Marie Grace Pamela G. Faylona, Armand Salvador B. Mijares and Martin Porr (2015: "Shell tool technology in Island Southeast Asia: an early Middle Holocene Tridacna adze from Ilin Island, Mindoro, Philippines". Antiquity, volume 89, issue 344, pages 292–308. doi:10.15184/aqy.2015.3.
  23. ^ Leslie C. Hazell (2013): "Transporting Stone Money in Micronesia". Chapter in Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures, ISBN 978-94-007-3934-5.
  24. ^ Francis X. Hezel (1983): "The First Taint of Civilization: A History of the Caroline and Marshall Islands in Pre-Colonial Day, 1521–1885". University of Hawai'i Press, ISBN 978-0-8248-1643-8.
  25. ^ Powers, Dennis M. (2010). Tales of the Seven Seas: The Escapades of Captain Dynamite Johnny O'Brien. Lanham, Md.: Taylor Trade Publishing. p. 136. ISBN 9781589794474.
  26. ^ Klingman, Lawrence; Green, Gerald (1950). His Majesty O'Keefe. NY: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  27. ^ His Majesty O'Keefe on IMDb
  28. ^ Walton, Jo Lindsay (2022). "Bitcoin and stone money: Anglophone uses of Yapese economic cultures 1910–2020" (PDF). Finance and Society. 8: 42–66. doi:10.2218/finsoc.7126. S2CID 248463377.

Bibliography

External links

  • "Yapese Quarry Sites", PacificWorlds.com.
  • License Plate with rai symbol and slogan from licenseplateinfo.com.
  • "Stone Money", The Road to Riches, bbc.co.uk.

stones, stone, yapese, raay, stone, many, large, artifacts, that, were, manufactured, treasured, native, inhabitants, islands, micronesia, they, also, known, yapese, stone, money, similar, names, large, approximately, feet, height, example, yapese, stone, vill. A rai stone Yapese raay 1 or fei stone 2 is one of many large artifacts that were manufactured and treasured by the native inhabitants of the Yap islands in Micronesia They are also known as Yapese stone money or similar names A large approximately 8 feet in height example of Yapese stone Rai in the village of Gachpar The typical rai stone is carved out of crystalline limestone and shaped like a disk with a hole in the center The smallest may be 3 5 centimetres 1 4 in in diameter The largest extant stone is located on Rumung island near the Riy village it is 3 6 metres 12 ft in diameter and 50 centimetres 20 in thick and weighs 4 000 kilograms 8 800 lb 3 4 Rai stones were quarried on several of the Micronesian islands mainly Palau 5 but briefly on Guam as well The practice stopped in the early 20th century Today around 6 000 large rai stones are outstanding on the island clarification needed and several can be seen in museums worldwide 6 7 The stones were highly valued by the Yapese and used for important ceremonial gifts The ownership of a large stone which would be too difficult to move was established by its history as recorded in oral tradition rather than by its location Appending a transfer to the oral history of the stone thus effected a change of ownership 3 Modern economists have viewed Rai stones as a form of money and are often used as an example to support the thesis that the value of some form of money can be assigned purely through a shared belief in said value 3 8 Contents 1 Names 2 Physical description 3 Use and value 4 History 4 1 Origin legends 4 2 Archaeological and anthropological evidence 4 3 Native manufacture 4 4 European discovery 4 5 Manufacturing after European contact 4 6 End of manufacture 5 Economic interpretation 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksNames EditOriginally the name rai was used in the northern part of Yap and fei in the southern part The names are also transcribed as rei and fai respectively and are often capitalized In Palau the stones are called palan 2 In the 20th century the name fei fell into disuse 3 The name rai could mean whale in Yapese This may be a reference to one of the origin legends in which the first stones were shaped like fish 9 Physical description Edit Rai stone at the Hamburg Ethnology Museum Rai stones are approximately round although some more recent ones are rather elongated 10 11 In the best worked ones the thickness gradually decreases from the center to the rim or in two or three steps The central hole has about 1 6 of the diameter of the stone Sometimes there are additional holes off center 10 12 The diameter varies from 3 5 centimetres 1 4 in to 3 6 metres 12 ft but most are between 30 and 50 centimetres 12 and 20 in 3 The stones are made of light colored crystalline rock consisting of calcium carbonate Stones with brown or white streaks were particularly prized 10 Weathered stones are dull gray 12 Earlier reports incorrectly state that the material is aragonite the most common mineral in coral and sea shells and in rocks derived thereof Modern analysis revealed that the mineral is in fact calcite 13 14 9 The stone occurs in Palau as deposits slowly formed on the walls of some caves by percolating rainwater speleothems specifically flowstones Tectonic activity millions of years ago lifted limestone deposits out of the sea eroded by rainwater forming a typical cave riled karst geology 15 Use and value EditRai stones were and still are 16 used in rare important social transactions such as marriage inheritance political deals sign of an alliance ransom of the battle dead or rarely in exchange for food citation needed Many are placed in front of meetinghouses around village courts or along pathways Although the ownership of a particular stone might change the stone itself is rarely moved due to its weight and risk of damage Thus the physical location of a stone was often not significant ownership was established by shared agreement and could be transferred even without physical access to the stone Each large stone had an oral history that included the names of previous owners In one instance a large rai being transported by canoe and outrigger was accidentally dropped and sank to the sea floor Although it was never seen again everyone agreed that the rai must still be there so it continued to be transacted as any other stone 16 The perceived value of a specific stone was based on its size craftsmanship and history The value could depend for instance on whether a famous sailor brought it or whether people died during its transport citation needed History EditOrigin legends Edit The story of the origin of the rai stones survives only in Yapese oral legends According to one version about 500 600 years ago 9 Anagumang a Yapese from Tomil island was instructed by the divinity Le gerem to travel by boat with seven companions to the mythical island of Magaragar south of Palau where they found a sparkling stone According to some variants the stones were first cut in various shapes such as fish lizard turtle or crescent moon But eventually they settled for the shape of a full moon with a hole at the center for transport 3 17 18 In another version the discovery expedition was headed by Anagumang and a Fatha an from Yap s Rull island 19 A different legend attributes the discovery to chance by a group of fishermen driven to Palau by a storm According to one variant they fashioned a fish from the local sparking stone and took it to the king of Rull as a substitute for the fish they failed to catch 3 A separate legend tells that before the Palau quarries were discovered the inhabitants of the village of Talangeth on Map island attempted to make rai stones from the local quartzite rock but the attempts were abandoned due to clan wars 10 3 20 Archaeological and anthropological evidence Edit Map of Yap Palau and nearby islands It is unknown how long the rai stones have been used in Yap Flat rocks up to 2000 years old have been found there but the oldest does not resemble today s rai stones and how they were used is not known 3 An alternative hypothesis for the origin of rai stones is that they may have evolved from smaller carved beads 3 Two disks without holes measuring 3 5 centimetres 1 4 in and 11 2 centimetres 4 4 in were found and radiocarbon dated 1636 200 and 1756 200 respectively However the relationship between these objects and the rai stones is unclear 21 Calcite speleothems do not occur on the Yap islands which consist mostly of metamorphic rock rather than limestone However there are small veins of marble a crystalline calcite rocks of metamorphic origin that has a sparkling appearance similar to that of the Palau flowstones It has been conjectured that the Yapese originally came to value crystalline calcite from these sources before discovering the much more abundant deposits in the Palau caves 14 Archaeologists have identified quarries used by the Yapese in a relatively small region of Palau spanning the southern end of Babeldaob and the northern part of Koror Some rai stones were found elsewhere in Palau but the quarries if any had not been found as of 2006 Excavations were carried out at the quarries of Omis Cave on the island of Oreor Chelechol ra Orrak and Upper Orrak on the island of Orrak and Metuker ra Bisech on the island of the same name The first two sites caves coves that open on the beach appear to have been exploited before contact with Europeans although the dates could not be determined The other two sites are located uphill some distance from the beach Quarrying at Metuker ra Bisech appears to have started only around 1700 CE after the Yapese acquired iron tools A large stone 3 5 m diameter 20 cm thick that apparently broke while being removed from the quarry at Metuker ra Bisech was abandoned on the spot 9 Native manufacture Edit Rai stones with carrying logs 1903 Rai stone production was well developed by the 19th century Expeditions to Palau consisting of tens of young men authorized or commanded by a village chief would last up to several years and could result in the death of members at the quarries or during the sea voyage According to some accounts on their return the largest stones and 2 5 of the smaller ones were handed over to the chief and the men were rewarded with baskets of taro 10 11 Palau lies 400 km west of Yap on a straight line According to later oral accounts from Yap and Palau the Yapese first mined on the small island of Magaragar Ngaragasemieg because they were afraid to land on the larger nearby island of Peleliu Eventually the Palau natives gave the Yapese permission to quarry in exchange for heavy labor and a few other items they brought from Yap A report from 1903 claims that a large paved road in the island of Koror was built by the Yapese 3 In the quarries the stones were cut out from the wall deposits of calcite as rough upright disks It seems that they were then propped up against natural or artificial walls for shaping finishing and polishing The rough work appears to have been done with pickaxes or adzes with blades 1 to 3 cm wide made of stone or of the shell of large clams such as Tridacna 3 13 22 According to oral traditions the central hole was made with a coral reef stone used as a fire drill presumably a large bow drill 13 While the clam shells and coral are made of calcium carbonate too they consist of the aragonite form which is harder than the stone s calcite 3 5 4 0 and 3 0 in the Mohs hardness scale respectively The expeditions traveled to Palau by canoes On the return the stones could be carried by canoe or for the larger specimens on bamboo rafts Since the raft was slow and poorly steerable it was usually let loose in advance to be carried towards Yap by sea currents while the men left some time later in canoes on its pursuit This return route could be more than 1000 km long The expedition would eventually recover the raft in the vicinity of Yap and tow it to the islands Stones were often lost at sea These methods of transport apparently limited the diameter of stones to 2 metres or less and 2 tons of weight 3 23 It is reported that the stones were transported on land by inserting a log or bamboo through the hole which was carried on the shoulders of several men 10 Carried this way the largest stones would have needed hundreds of men to transport suggesting the more likely possibility that the largest stones were rolled akin to wheels on an axle European discovery Edit The earliest reports by western Jesuits of what could be the Yapese rai stones date from the early 1700s 24 3 A report of a European expedition in 1815 1818 mentions that the Yap islands produce grinding stones that are used by chieftains as thrones with one stone serving as seat and another as the back rest 3 The first clear report of a rai stone is from a British ship log entry dated 23 August 1843 The ship carried a delegation from Palau headed by chieftain Abba Thulle who was delivering a 60 centimetres 24 in rai stone as a diplomatic gift to the prime minister of Yap and a cadre of Tomil chieftains The ship s captain Andrew Cheyne notes that the stone was highly valued since it could be found only in the mountains of Palau While referring to the stone as a gift of money Andrew did not mention seeing any other rai stone during his stay at Yap His commercial agent Alfred Tetens reported in his memoirs that in 1865 he transported ten Yapese from Palau to Yap who were carrying 20 large blocks and many smaller ones a few cm in diameter to be used as currency 3 Manufacturing after European contact Edit Contact with Europeans in the 19th century first provided the Yapese at Palau with iron tools that made the cutting and shaping of the stones much easier Not much later the Yapese made deals with Europeans to use their ships to transport the stones back to Yap These arrangements enabled the manufacture of much larger and heavier rai stones up to 4 meters in diameter as well of a larger number of them However these modern stones were less valuable than more ancient ones 3 In 1871 the Irish American David Dean O Keefe was shipwrecked near Yap and was helped by the natives Later he assisted the Yapese in acquiring rai stones and in return received copra and trepang which were valuable exports in the Far East 25 The book His Majesty O Keefe is the story of his life on Yap 26 A film of the same name starring Burt Lancaster was made in 1954 27 End of manufacture Edit The trade for rai stones eventually stopped at the beginning of the 20th century due to trade disputes between Spanish and German interests in the area Quarries were abandoned When Imperial Japanese forces took over Yap during World War II they used some of the stones for construction or as anchors citation needed Although modern currency has replaced the stones as everyday currency the rai stones are still exchanged in traditional ways between the Yapese They are a national symbol and are depicted on local license plates Economic interpretation EditIn a 1991 paper economist Milton Friedman argued that while the Yap system of immobile money might seem bizarre at first glance it was not so different from the operation of the gold vault of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York which can pay gold from one government to another without the gold ever leaving the vault Demands by the government of France for such payment from the United States in 1932 contributed to a nationwide bank panic proving that industrialized countries could fall under the sway of economic rituals as surely as the Yap islanders 8 A 2022 study by a non economist Jo Lindsay Walton a Research Fellow in Arts Climate and Technology at the University of Sussex claims inconsistencies errors and omissions in many Western economic accounts of stone money including Friedman s asserting that when Yap has appeared in Western political economy the lessons which authors draw often reflect their position in intellectual and political disputes which are not principally rooted in Yapese history or economics 28 Gallery Edit Rai stone at the Bank of Canada Currency Museum in Ottawa Rai stone at Yap Yap stone British Museum London Presentation of Yapese rai stone for Federated States of Micronesia inauguration Stone depicted on Yap license plate Rai stone transport to Yap Island 1880 See also EditBi jade Petrosphere List of storms named Rai a list of tropical cyclones that were named after the Yapese stone money References Edit Raay2 Yapese Dictionary Updated 27 July 2012 Retrieved 25 November 2013 a b Rainbird 2004 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Gillilland Cora Lee C 1975 The Stone Money of Yap A Numismatic Survey Smithsonian Studies in History and Technology 23 Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Press p 75 Rai of Yap the stone money Wondermondo 13 November 2011 G S Parsonson 1962 The Settlement of Oceania An Examination of the Accidental Voyage Theory Journal of the Polynesian Society Auckland University Retrieved 19 September 2016 The natives of Yap in Micronesia went 300 miles to the Palau Islands for stone money great calcite disks six to twelve feet in diameter Patterson Carolyn Bennett et al At the Birth of Nations In the Far Pacific National Geographic Magazine October 1986 page 498 National Geographic Virtual Library Metuker ra Bisech Yapese Quarried Stone Money Site AiraiState com Archived from the original on 20 August 2013 a b Friedman Milton 1991 The Island of Stone Money Working Papers in Economics E 91 3 Archived from the original on 3 November 2021 Retrieved 15 February 2022 a b c d Scott M Fitzpatrick et al 2006 a b c d e f Muller 1917 a b Beauclair 1963 a b Furness 1910 a b c Scott M Fitzpatrick 2001 Archaeological investigation of Omis Cave a Yapese stone money quarry in Palau Archaeology of Oceania volume 36 pages 153 162 a b Bosiljka Glumac and Scott Fitzpatrick 2020 Yapese stone money Local marble as a potential inspiration for producing limestone exchange valuables in Palau Micronesia Chapter of Cultures of Stone An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Materiality of Stone ISBN 978 90 8890 893 4 pages 65 78 Scott M Fitzpatrick 2013 An Archaeological Study on the Extraction of Flowstone from Caves and Rockshelters for Producing Stone Money in Western Micronesia Cave and Karst sciences volume 30 issue 2 pages 75 82 a b Goldstein Jacob Kestenbaum David The Island of Stone Money NPR org NPR Retrieved 5 January 2010 William Armand Less 1981 More Tales from Ulithi Atoll A Content Analysis University of California Berkeley p 53 ISBN 978 0 520 09615 8 Pine Art 29 March 1984 Fixed Assets or Why a Loan in Yap is Hard to Roll Over The Wall Street Journal p A1 reprinted in Mankiw N Gregory Essentials of Economics Third Edition Mason South Western 2004 pp 454 455 Fitzpatrick and McKeon 2019 Robert D Leonard 1993 The Stone Money Of Yap Quarterly Journal of the Central States Numismatic Society volume 41 issue 1 pages 31 34 E W Gifford and D S Gifford 1959 Archaeological Excavations in Yap Anthropological Records volume 18 issue 2 pages 149 224 Alfred F Pawlik Philip J Piper Rachel E Wood Kristine Kate A Lim Marie Grace Pamela G Faylona Armand Salvador B Mijares and Martin Porr 2015 Shell tool technology in Island Southeast Asia an early Middle Holocene Tridacna adze from Ilin Island Mindoro Philippines Antiquity volume 89 issue 344 pages 292 308 doi 10 15184 aqy 2015 3 Leslie C Hazell 2013 Transporting Stone Money in Micronesia Chapter in Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures ISBN 978 94 007 3934 5 Francis X Hezel 1983 The First Taint of Civilization A History of the Caroline and Marshall Islands in Pre Colonial Day 1521 1885 University of Hawai i Press ISBN 978 0 8248 1643 8 Powers Dennis M 2010 Tales of the Seven Seas The Escapades of Captain Dynamite Johnny O Brien Lanham Md Taylor Trade Publishing p 136 ISBN 9781589794474 Klingman Lawrence Green Gerald 1950 His Majesty O Keefe NY Charles Scribner s Sons His Majesty O Keefe on IMDb Walton Jo Lindsay 2022 Bitcoin and stone money Anglophone uses of Yapese economic cultures 1910 2020 PDF Finance and Society 8 42 66 doi 10 2218 finsoc 7126 S2CID 248463377 Bibliography EditBryan Michael F 2004 02 01 Island Money Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland 1 February 2004 Retrieved from https web archive org web 20110927230430 http www clevelandfed org research commentary 2004 0201 pdf Murphy Geri 2011 Yap s Amazing Stone Money Sport Diver 2011 Retrieved from http www sportdiver com keywords yaps yaps amazing stone money Poole Robert Michael 2018 The tiny island with human sized money BBC Travel www bbc com 2018 Retrieved from http www bbc com travel story 20180502 the tiny island with human sized money External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rai stones Yapese Quarry Sites PacificWorlds com License Plate with rai symbol and slogan from licenseplateinfo com Stone Money The Road to Riches bbc co uk Portals Money Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rai stones amp oldid 1142334598, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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