The dollar, the most widely recognized currency name in the world, traces its origins not to a bank or a government but to a silver mine in a Bohemian valley. The word descends from German 'Thaler,' itself short for 'Joachimsthaler' — a coin minted in the town of Joachimsthal (St. Joachim's Valley), now Jáchymov in the Czech Republic.
In 1516, rich silver deposits were discovered in the Erzgebirge mountains of northwestern Bohemia. By 1519, Count Hieronymus Schlick was minting large silver coins from this ore, which became known as 'Joachimsthalers' after the valley (Thal) where they were produced. These coins were of consistent weight and purity, making them widely trusted across Central Europe. As their circulation spread, the cumbersome name shortened to 'Thaler' in High German, 'daler' in Low German and Dutch, and eventually 'dollar' in
The German word 'Thal' (modern spelling 'Tal') means 'valley,' from Proto-Germanic *dalą, from PIE *dʰel- (hollow, curved). The same root produced English 'dale' (a valley, as in the Yorkshire Dales) and 'dell' (a small wooded valley). So the dollar is, etymologically, 'a coin from the valley.'
The thaler became one of Europe's dominant trade coins, and its name was adopted for various local currencies. The Dutch 'leeuwendaler' (lion dollar) circulated heavily in the Dutch colonies, including New Amsterdam (later New York), where it became the standard reference coin for English-speaking colonists. In Scotland, a large silver coin was called 'the dollar.' In Spain's American colonies, the 'peso de a ocho' (piece of eight) was colloquially called a 'dollar' by English-speaking traders
When the newly independent United States needed a name for its currency in 1785, the Continental Congress deliberately chose 'dollar' over 'pound.' The choice was political: the pound was the currency of the colonial master, while 'dollar' was already familiar from colonial commerce and carried no British associations. Thomas Jefferson was instrumental in this decision, also proposing the decimal system that divides the dollar into 100 cents — a radical innovation at the time, when most currencies used non-decimal subdivisions.
The $ symbol's origin is disputed. The most widely accepted theory traces it to the Spanish peso, abbreviated 'ps,' which was written with the S overlapping the p's vertical stroke. Another theory connects it to the Pillars of Hercules stamped on Spanish colonial coins, with the S-shaped banner wrapping around the pillar. A third, less likely theory derives it from the letters U and S superimposed.
Today, 'dollar' is the name of the national currency in over twenty countries, from the United States and Canada to Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Hong Kong. Each 'dollar' carries within its name the memory of a sixteenth-century Bohemian mining town that most of its users have never heard of.