What Is The Aureus Nummus
The Aureus Nummus (“AN”) is a digital asset and currency, which is backed by physical gold and serves as an international payment and savings instrument. Historically the Aureus Nummus was the most valuable gold coin in the Roman Empire.
The minimum price of the Aureus Nummus is permanently set at the price of gold bullion. There is no upper price limit and the Aureus Nummus can freely appreciate to the upside, but it can never fall below the price of gold bullion. The link to the price of gold bullion is not just a mere software algorithm or wishful thinking but is based on real physical gold. For each Aureus Nummus, that is sold to the public the equivalent amount of gold automatically is purchased through a linked brokerage account and put in trust.


- 1 ounce of gold bullion = approx. 1,300 US-Dollars (fluctuates with daily price of gold)
- 100,000 Aureus Nummus are equal or greater than 1 ounce of gold bullion
- 1 Aureus Nummus is equal to approximately 13 Dollar cents or 0.13 US-Dollars.
The purpose of the Aureus Nummus is to complement traditional fiat currencies as international payment and savings instrument.
The value of one Aureus Nummus coin has been set on purpose at the US-Dollar cent level in order to assist consumers and enterprises with payment and settlement of small bills and transactions.
The Aureus Nummus is based on AI technology, and runs on an Ethereum smart contract. As a result, the Aureus Nummus runs exactly as programmed without any possibility of downtime, censorship, fraud, and third-party interference. Its consensus protocol eliminates completely the need to trust intermediaries, as every transaction is verified and confirmed by the public community with complete transparency.
Sending and receiving payments anywhere in the world is easy, fast and cheap with the Aureus Nummus.
Compare that to regular bank transactions, which not only are much more expensive compared to the Aureus Nummus, but also are vulnerable to theft and fraud – contrary to the completely secure Aureus Nummus transactions. Hackers can steal your bank payment information from merchants, but in the case of the Aureus Nummus, stealing Aureus Nummus addresses is completely useless because for a transaction to be valid, it must be signed with its associated private key, which the user doesn’t need to share with anyone to make a payment.
