Castilian mark

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Castilian Mark , in the modern spelling Castilian Mark or correctly modern Castilian Mark , was a Spanish unit of weight and the basis of the medical weight . In 1818 the weights were determined to be 3550.5 Troy-Grän at the London Mint and were therefore valid

  • 1 Castilian pound = 2 marks = 9573.6776 As (Dutch) = 460.142 grams

As gold and silver weight was the dimensional chain

  • 1 Castilian Mark = 8 Oncas = 64 Ochavos = 128 Adarmes = 384 Tomines = 4606 Granos = 4786.8388 As (Dutch) = 230.071 grams

As a medical weight was the dimensional chain

  • 1 Castilian Mark = 8 Oncas = 64 Drachmas = 192 Escrupolos = 384 Obolos = 766 Caracteres = 3072 Granos

literature

  • Carl LW Aldefeld: The dimensions and weights of the German customs union states and many other countries and trading centers in their mutual relationships. Verlag JG Cotta, Stuttgart / Tübingen 1838, p. 279 ( digitized version ).