A C Q U I S I T I O N S D I G I T A L L I B R A R Y N U M I S - 6 7 ( 0 3 - 2 0 1 5 )
INTRODUCTION
Digital Library Numis (DLN) is intended as a general portal and repository of all open access numismatic books, journals and articles, currently available on the internet. All entries are presented with detailed bibliographic metadata, often supplemented with a brief summary of the subject. DLN is in particular useful as an additional research tool for professional numismatists, but also for other scholars interested in the field, branch libraries and advanced coin collectors.
GENERAL NUMISMATICS
Index: Blet-Lemarquand, Maryse
Title: L'analyse élémentaire des monnaies : adéquation entre les problématiques envisagées, les alliages étudiés et les méthodes utilisées / Maryse Blet-Lemarquand, Bernard Gratuze et Jean-Noël Barrandon
Source: Selbstwahrnehmung und Fremdwahrnehmung in der Fundmünzenbearbeitung : Bilanz und Perspektiven am Beginn des 21. Jahrhunderts = Regards croisés sur l'étude des trouvailles monétaires : Bilan et perspectives au début du XXIe siècle. II: Reflexionen : Sitzungsbericht des fünften internationalen Kolloquiums der Schweizerischen Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Fundmünzen gemeinsam organisiert mit der Numismatischen Kommission der Länder in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (Konstanz, 4.-5. März 2005) = Réflexions : Actes du cinquième colloque international du Groupe suisse pour l'étude des trouvailles monétaires organisé conjointement avec la Numismatische Kommission der Länder in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (Constance, 4-5 mars 2005) / hrsg. von Harald Derschka, Suzanne Frey-Kupper, Reiner Cunz. - Lausanne : Zèbre, 2014. - ((Untersuchungen zu Numismatik und Geldgechichte ; 7). - P. 121-146
Abstract: If an analysis of the elements of which certain coins are made is to usefully round out a ‘traditional’ numismatic approach, there must be close and constructive cooperation between the numismatist who formulates the questions to be addressed through archaeometry, and a specialist in the methodology of metal analysis, with experience of the specific problems that coins pose. The two must first together decide on which analytical method to use. This decision will be critical for the final value of the study, and must be based both on the alloy from which the coins were made, and the questions to be answered. The paper provides a critical review of the range of methods that may be applied to each of the major families of monetary alloys: gold, silver, and copper. It points out the strengths and the weaknesses of each method. Only wholly non-destructive methods, or methods using micro-sampling invisible to the naked eye, are considered.
Index: Colloquium
Title: A colloquium in memory of George Carpenter Miles (1904-1975)
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1976
Index: Vennemann, Theo 1937-
Title: 'Münze', 'mint', and 'money:': an etymology for Latin 'moneta' : with appendices on Carthaginian 'tanit' and the Indo-European 'month' word / Theo Vennemann
Source: Evidence and counter-evidence : essays in honour of Frederik Kortlandt. Vol. 1: Balto-Slavic and Indo-European linguistics / ed. by Alexander Lubotsky, Jos Schaeken, Jeroen Wiedenhof ; with the assistance of Rik Derksen and Sjoerd Siebinga. - Amsterdam [etc.] : Rodopi, 2008. - (Studies in Slavic and general linguistics ; vol. 32-33). - p. 569-590
Index: Williams, Daniela
Title: Zoëga studente di numismatica : il soggiorno a Vienna (1782) e i contatti con Joseph Eckhel / Daniela Williams and Bernhard Woytek
Source: The forgotten scholar: Georg Zoëga (1755-1809) : at the dawn of Egyptology and Coptic studies / ed. by Karen Ascani, Paola Buzi and Daniela Picchi. - Leiden ; Boston, Brill, 2015. - P. 101-110
ANCIENT NUMISMATICS
Index: Akerman, John Yonge 1806-1873
Title: Catalogue d'une partie de la collection de médailles du chevalier de Horta, faite par son père pendant ses différentes ambassades à Vienne, la Haye, et Saint Petersbourg / par John Yonge Akerman
Published: Londres : impr. par J. Wertheimer et cie, 1839
Index: Andonova, Margarita
Title: Numismatic collection of the Regional Historical Museum at Blagoevrad (ancient 'Skaptopara') : (coins from the 5th century BC to the 5th century AD) / by Margarita Andonova ... [et al.] ; ed. in chief: Ilya S. Prokopov
Series: Coin collections and coin hoards from Bulgaria (CCCHBulg) ; vol. 4
Published: Sofia : Provias, 2014
Index: Duyrat, Frédérique 1970-
Title: Bibliographie numismatique de la Syrie. I: Périodes achéménide et hellénistique (1995-2000) / Frédérique Duyrat
Source: Syria 80 (2003) p. 237-266
Index: Duyrat, Frédérique 1970-
Title: Bibliographie numismatique de la Syrie. II: Périodes romaine et byzantine (1995-2000) / Frédérique Duyrat
Source: Syria 83 (2006) p. 283-300
Index: Duyrat, Frédérique
Title: Bibliographie numismatique de la Syrie. IV: Périodes achéménide, hellénistique, romaine et byzantine (2006-2008) / Frédérique Duyrat
Source: Syria 87 (2010) p. 301-316
Index: Duyrat, Frédérique
Title: Bibliographie numismatique de la Syrie. V: Périodes achéménide, hellénistique, romaine et byzantine (2008-2009) / Frédérique Duyrat
Source: Syria 89 (2012) p. 369-384
Index: Filipova, Svetoslava 1965-
Title: The numismatic collection of the Regional Historical Museum at Kyustendil (ancient 'Ulpia Pautalia'). Pt. I: Greek, Thracian, Macedonian, Roman Republican and Roman provincial coins / by Svetoslava Filipova, Ilya Prokopov and Eugeni Paunov ; general ed.: Ilya S.
Prokopov
Series: Coin collections and coin hoards from Bulgaria (CCCHBulg) ; vol. 2
Published: Sofia : Provias, 2009
Index: Kool, Robert
Title: Roman and Byzantine coins from the excavation on the eastern fringes of Tel Shiqmona / Robert Kool
Source: 'Atiqot 72 (December 2012) p. 41-51
Abstract: A total of 194 coins were uncovered on the eastern fringes of Tel Shiqmona; 71 of them were identified. Except for one Seleucid-period coin, minted in Tyre during the second century BCE, all the coins belong to one continuous period beginning in the early fourth century and ending with the reign of the Byzantine emperor Maurice (582–602 CE).
Index: Nollé, Johannes 1953-
Title: Athena in der Schmiede des Hephaistos : militär-, wirtschafts- und sozialgeschichtliche Implikationen von Münzbildern / Johannes Nollé
Source: Jahrbuch für Numismatik und Geldgeschichte 45 (1995) p. 51-77
GREEK NUMISMATICS
Index: Arévalo González, Alicia
Title: Sobre el posible significado y uso de algunas contramarcas en moneda de 'Gadir/Gades' / por Alicia Arévalo González
Source: Numisma 250 (enero-diciembre 2006) p. 69–100
Abstract: This work presents the state of things on the Gaditan countermarks; it also conducts a careful analysis of some of the figurative countermarks that appear on this type of currencĪ and compares them to certain potters’ marks. LastlĪ, the author examines the archeological contexts in which these coins appear, and this brings up the existence of a link with the Gaditan salting industry, while it draws us closer to the possible significance and use of this exceptional numismatic material.
Index: Ashton, Richard 1946-
Title: The pseudo-Rhodian drachms of Mylasa revisited / Richard Ashton and Gary Reger
Source: Agoranomia : studies in money and exchange presented to John H. Kroll / ed. by Peter G. van Alfen. - New York : American Numismatic Society, 2006. - P. 125-150, pl. 5-6
Index: Bellinger, Alfred Raymond 1893-1978
Title: Essays on the coinage of Alexander the Great / by Alfred R. Bellinger
Series: Numismatic studies ; no. 11
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1963
Index: Chevillon, Jean-Albert
Title: The Greek Far West : an exceptional adaptation of a design from Asia Minor with bull and lion foreparts / Jean-Albert Chevillon and Pere Pau Ripollès
Source: Journal of the Numismatic Association of Australia 25 (2014) p. 41-46
Abstract: Our recent research on the coinages of Emporion has enabled us to collect six new post-archaic specimens, probably all minted in the north east of the Iberian Peninsula, which depict the joined foreparts of lion (right) and bull (left) on the obverse. This design, initiated in Sardis (Asia Minor) in the middle of the 6th century B.C., is not known to have been used elsewhere.
Index: Dalaison, Julie 1975-
Title: L'atelier monétaire de Nicopolis en Arménie Mineure / Julie Dalaison
Source: Espaces et pouvoirs dans l'Antiquité de l'Anatolie à la Gaule : hommages à Bernard Rémy / textes réunis et ed. par Julie Dalaison. - Grenoble : CRHIPA, 2007. - (Cahiers du CRHIPA ; 11). - P. 7-37
Index: Dalaison, Julie 1975-
Title: L'atelier monétaire de Pompeiopolis en Paphlagonie / Julie Dalaison
Source: Des déserts d'Afrique au pays des Allobroges : mélanges offerts à François Bertrandy. T. 1 / textes réunis et éd. par Fabrice Delrieux et François Kayser. - Chambéry : Université de Savoie, 2010. - (Collection Sociétés, religions, politiques ; no. 16). - P. 45-81
Index: Dalaison, Julie 1975-
Title: La cité de Néapolis-Néoclaudiopolis : histoire et pratiques monétaires / Julie Dalaison et Fabrice Delrieux
Source: Anatolia Antiqua 22 (2014) p. 159-198
Index: Dalaison, Julie 1975-
Title: Les divinités d’origine indigène et iranienne sur le monnayage des cités du Pont sous les premiers Sévères / Julie Dalaison, Bernard Rémy
Source: Revue Numismatique, 170 (2013) p. 29-60
Abstract: It is probably at the end of 114 AD that the cities of Galatic and Polemoniac Pontus, previously belonging to Galatia, were moved to Cappadocia. Among the pantheon of deities depicted on their coinage we ind native Iranian and Graeco-Roman gods. Save for Sebastopolis, each of the other cities celebrated on its coins a native or Iranian deity of its own. The persistence of this practice during the Severan period is not linked to some renewed interest in a remote past, but rather conirms how important were local and Iranian inluences in Pontus. Even so, the gods as depicted have evolved markedly, the result of a history in which different layers have superimposed themselves.
Index: Dalaison, Julie 1975-
Title: Qui était Salomé ? / Julie Dalaison
Source: Revue des Études Anciennes, 115 (2013) 2 p. 497-507
Abstract: Some coins emitted by the city of Nicopolis in Armenia Minor show the portraits of the king Aristobulus and his wife Salome. This mint raises the question of the true identity of Salome, in order to know if she was the famous Salome – ' Salome of the Seven Veils' – who, by order of her mother Herodias, would have charmed Antipas in dancing to obtain the head of John the Baptist. Going over the accounts of Flavius Josephus writings and the Gospels, together with a reassessment of several aspects of the deeply complex genealogy of the Herodians, this article attempts to show that in fact there were two different women.
Index: Delrieux, Fabrice
Title: La crise financière des cités grecques d'Asie Mineure au Ier siècle a.C. et la lettre de Cicéron à Q. Minucius Thermus (Fam., XIII, 56) / Fabrice Delrieux
Source: Hellenistic Karia : proceedings of the First International Conference on Hellenistic Karia, Oxford, 29 June-2 July 2006 / ed. by Riet van Bremen and Jan-Mathieu Carbon. - Bordeaux : De Boccard, 2010. - P. 505-526
Index: Delrieux, Fabrice
Title: Les monnaies de Mylasa au nom de Tib. Claudius Melas. Bienfait, droit de cité romaine et culte impérial dans la Carie du Ier siècle p.C. / Fabrice Delrieux
Source: Des déserts d'Afrique au pays des Allobroges : mélanges offerts à François Bertrandy. T. 1 / textes réunis et éd. par Fabrice Delrieux et François Kayser. - Chambéry : Université de Savoie, 2010. - (Collection Sociétés, religions, politiques ; no. 16). - P. 107-144
Index: Gitler, Haim 1962-
Title: A hoard of Tyrian and Athenian coins from Dalton, Israel / Haim Gitler and Oren Tal
Source: Phéniciens d'Orient et d'Occident : mélanges Josette Elayi / éd. par André Lemaire ; avec la collab. de Bertrand Dufour et Fabian Pfitzmann. - Paris : Maisonneuve, 2014. - (Cahiers de l'Institut du Proche-Orient ancien du Collège de France ; 2). - P. 243-249
Index: Gitler, Haim 1962-
Title: More than meets the eye : Athenian owls and the chronology of Southern Palestinian coinages of the Persian period / Haim Gitler, Oren Tal
Source: Israel Numismatic Research 9 (2014) p. 15-27, pl. 1
Abstract: In our INR 7 paper we suggested that with regard to the treatment of eyes on Philistian coins, the predominant style was the three-quarter profile eye found on Athenian tetradrachms in c. 420–390 BCE. In this follow-up paper we have re-examined 53 Athenian issues found in licensed archeological excavations in Palestine. The percentages of coins per period in terms of similarity of eye treatment between these Athenian finds and the Philistian and Samarian coinages are significantly similar. Artistically, this indicates that local craftsmen were strongly influenced by Greek die engraving. Another implication may be chronological, suggesting a close dating between the circulating Athenian issues and local coins.
Index: Gorini, Giovanni 1941-
Title: La presenza greca in Italia Settentrionale : la documentazione numismatica / Giovanni Gorini
Published: [S.l.] : Universidad de Sevilla, [1992]
Note: Offprint from: Griegos en occidente / ed. de Francisca Chaves Tristn. - [Sevilla] : Secretariado de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Sevilla 1992. – (Anales de la Universidad Hispalense.. Ser. Filosofa Ī letras ; no. 139). – P. 91-114
Index: Höghammar, Kerstin 1950-
Title: The ancient Koan and Kalymnian coins at the Royal Coin Cabinet, Stockholm / Kerstin Höghammar
Source: Opus mixtum : uppsatser kring Uppsala universitets myntkabinett / utg. Harald Nilsson. - Uppsala : Uppsala Universitet, 2009. - (Studia Numismatica Upsaliensia ; 4). - P. 95-114
Index: Holt, Walter C.
Title: A new Seleucid bronze coin and Dura hoard 13 revisited / Walter C. Holt and Nicholas L. Wright
Source: Israel Numismatic Research 5 (2010) p. 59-65
Abstract: An unpublished bronze coin in the name of King Antiochus allows a reattribution of a key coin from Hoard 13 at Dura-Europos. The coin is assessed in light of the available evidence and the hoard re-dated.
Index: Kagan, Jonathan H.
Title: The earliest coinage of Corcyra / Jonathan Kagan
Source: Nomismatik kai oikonomik istora st n peiro kat t n archaiót ta : praktik tou 1ou Diethnoús sĪnedrou (Panepist mio Iōannnōn, 3-7 Oktōvrou 2007) = Numismatic history and economy in Epirus during Antiquity : proceedings of the 1st International Conference (University of Ioannina, October 3rd-7th 2007) / ed. by Katerini Liampi ... [et al.]. - Athēna : Etairea Melétēs Nomismatikēs kai Oikonomikēs Istoras, LĪda Lthos, 2013. - (Kerma ; 3). - P. 3-8, pl. 1
Index: Konuk, Koray 1968-
Title: L'Asie Mineure aux époques archaïque et classique / Koray Konuk
Source: A survey of numismatic research, 1996-2001 / ed. generales Carmen Alfaro, Andrew Burnett. - Madrid : International Association of Professional Numismatists, 2003. – P. 113-131
Index: Lorber, Catharine C.
Title: An abortive era under Ptolemy IV Philopator? / Catharine C. Lorber
Source: Studies in memory of Dan Barag / ed. by: Robert Deutsch and Boaz Zissu. - Jerusalem : Israel Numismatic Journal, 2014. - (Israel Numismatic Journal ; vol. 18). - P. 31-38
Abstract: Ptolemaic tetradrachms with a letter gamma between the legs of the eagle were produced in several styles, indicating that they were probably products of more than one mint. Die linkage and erasures suggest they were followed by unmarked coins. The gamma-unmarked tetradrachms occur in hoards together with early issues of the Ptolemaic era coinage and show some stylistic affinities to the era coins. They can be attributed to Syria and Phoenicia under Ptolemy IV and may perhaps reflect a short-lived attempt to introduce an era based on the victory at Raphia in 217.
Index: Lorber, Catharine C.
Title: Dating the portrait coinage of Ptolemy I / Catharine C. Lorber
Source: American Journal of Numismatics 2nd ser. 24 (2012) p. 33-44, pl. 5-7
Abstract: PtolemĪ I’s introduction of his portrait/eagle tetradrachms is dated shortly after his reconquest of Cyprus in 294 bce, and control links indicate that the reform was efected contemporaneously in Egypt, on Cyprus, and at Sidon and Tyre. Ater an initial phase of intense minting associated with this reform, other episodes of heightened production are identiied and associated with military actions of Ptolemy I and II.
Index: Lorber, Catharine C.
Title: An Egyptian interpretation of Alexander's elephant headdres / Catharine C. Lorber
Source: American Journal of Numismatics 2nd ser. 24 (2012) p. 21-31
Abstract: he depiction of Alexander the Great in an elephant headdress on tetradrachms of early Hellenistic Egypt may recall the Syrian elephant hunt of the New Kingdom pharaoh
hutmose III, a great conqueror in Asia. Alexander was associated with hutmose III in the temple of Amun-Ra at Karnak.
Index: Newell, Edward Theodore 1886-1941
Title: The Alexander coinage of Sicyon / arr. from notes of Edward T. Newell ; with comments and additions by Sydney P. Noe
Series: Numismatic studies ; no. 6
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1950
Index: Newell, Edward Theodore 1886-1941
Title: Late Seleucid mints in Ake-Ptolemais and Damascus / by Edward T. Newell
Series: Numismatic notes and monographs ; no. 84
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1939
Index: Newell, Edward Theodore 1886-1941
Title: The pre-imperial coinage of Roman Antioch / [E.T. Newell]
Source: Numismatic Chronicle 4th ser. 19 (1919) p. 69-113, pl. 6-7
Index: Newell, Edward Theodore 1886-1941
Title: The Seleucid mint of Antioch / by Edward T. Newell
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1918
Index: Nollé, Johannes 1953-
Title: Kaiserliche Privilegien für Gladiatorenmunera und Tierhetzen / Johannes Nollé
Source: Jahrbuch für Numismatik und Geldgeschichte 42-43 (1992-1993) p. 49-82
Index: Nollé, Johannes 1953-
Title: Kitanaura : Münzen und Geschichte einer kleinen Stadt in den ostlykischen Bergen / Johannes Nollé
Source: Jahrbuch für Numismatik und Geldgeschichte 46 (1996) p. 7–29
Index: Nollé, Johannes 1953-
Title: Selge : historisch-numismatische Bemühungen um die Kultur einer untergegangenen pisidischen Stadt / Johannes Nollé
Source: XII. Internationaler Numismatischer Kongress Berlin 1997 : Akten = proceedings = actes. Bd. 1 / hrsg. von Bernd Kluge und Bernhard Weisser. - Berlin : Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, 2000. – P. 706-714
Index: Nollé, Johannes 1953-
Title: Side : zur Geschichte einer kleinasiatischen Stadt in der römischen Kaiserzeit im Spiegel ihrer Münzen / Johannes Nollé
Source: Antike Welt 21 (1990) p. 244-265
Index: Nollé, Johannes 1953-
Title: Von Anazarbos nach Mopsuhestia : historische Anmerkungen zu zwei unpublizierten Stadtprägungen der Römischen Kaiserzeit aus Kilikien / Johannes Nollé, Herbert Zellner
Source: Jahrbuch für Numismatik und Geldgeschichte 45 (1995) p. 39-49
Index: Nollé, Johannes 1953-
Title: Zur neueren Forschungsgeschichte der kaiserzeitlichen Stadtprägungen Kleinasiens / Johannes Nollé
Source: Internationales Kolloquium zur kaiserzeitlichen Münzprägung Kleinasiens : 27.-30. April 1994 in der Staatlichen Münzsammlung München / Hrsg. von Johannes Nollé, Bernhard Overbeck, Peter Weiss. - Milano : Eennerre, 1997. - (Nomismata ; 1). – P. 4-23
Index: Nollé, Margret Karola
Title: Gamerses : Überlegungen zur Identität eines lokalen Münzherrn im Achämenidenreich / Margret K. und Johannes Nollé
Published: Saarbrücken : SDV, 1996
Note: Offprint from: Hellas und der griechische Osten : Studien zur Geschichte und Numismatik der griechischen Welt : Festschrift für Peter Robert Franke zum 70. Geburtstag / Hrsg.: Wolfgang Leschorn, Auguste V. B. Miron und Andrei Miron. - Saarbrücken : SDV, 1996. – P. 197-209
Index: Oman, Charles William Chadwick 1860-1946
Title: Chronology of the coinage of Antiochus VIII of Syria / [C. Oman]
Source: Numismatic Chronicle 4th ser. 17 (1917) p. 190-206, pl. 8
Index: Papadopoulos, John K. 1958-
Title: Minting identity : coinage, ideology and the economics of colonization in Akhaian Magna Graecia / John K. Papadopoulos
Source: Cambridge Archaeological Journal 12 (2002) 1 p. 21-55
Abstract: This article focuses on the early coinage of the Akhaian cities of South Italy - Sybaris, Kroton, Metapontion, Kaulonia, Poseidonia - against the backdrop of colonization. Minting an early and distinctive series of coins, these centres were issuing coinage well before their ‘mother-cities’, a phenomenon that has never been fullĪ appreciated. With its origins in a colonial context, the Akhaian coinage of Magna Graecia not only differs from that of the early coin-minting states of the Greek mainland, it offers a case study that challenges long-held assumptions and potentially contributes to a better understanding of the origins of coinage. It does so by suggesting that coinage is much more than a symbol of authority and represents considerably more than just an abstract notion of sovereignty or hegemony. The images or emblems that the Akhaians of South Italy chose for their coins are those current in the contemporary cultural landscape of the historic Akhaians, but at the same time actively recall the world of the heroic Akhaians of the Bronze Age by referring to prehistoric measures of value. More than his, the vicissitudes of colonial and indigenous history in parts of South Italy in the Archaic period were not merely reflected in coinage, the coins themselves were central to the processes of transformation. By boldly minting - constructing - their identity on coinage, the Akhaians of South Italy chose money in order to create relations of dominance and to produce social orders that had not existed before.
Index: Papadopoulos, John K. 1958-
Title: Money, art, and the construction of value in the ancient Mediterranean / John K.
Papadopoulos
Source: The construction of value in the ancient world / ed. by John K. Papadopoulos and Gary Urton. - Los Angeles : Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, cop. 2012. - (Cotsen advanced seminar series ; vol. 5). - P. 261-287
Abstract: One of the most critical developments in the course of Mediterranean history was the invention of coinage. The quest for metals—the very commodities that define our periodization of ancient Greece (Copper Age, Bronze Age, Iron Age)—is not simply an issue of technological innovations, the vicissitudes of supply, or the mechanics of regional networks but a real search for structuring commodities of value that ultimately leads to an economic system of exchange not limited to elites. The culmination is the invention of coinage, which first occurs in western Anatolia and eastern Greece in the cultural milieu of the later seventh and sixth centuries B.C. It is an innovation with global consequences. In searching for the origins of coinage, the specifics of the particular cultural context are of paramount importance. By focusing on the early coinage of several Greek centers, more particularly on the emblems that certain city-states chose for their coinage, images that hark back to prehistoric measures of value -cattle, bronze tripods, grain- this paper challenges long-held assumptions as to the economic underpinnings of coinage. Struck by the state-the polis-these emblems sought to represent a collective identity. By boldly minting their identities on silver coinage, the Greek city-states chose money, the very vehicle of value, to create relations of dominance and to produce social orders that had not existed before.
Index: Peter, Ulrike 1966-
Title: The numismatic web portal for ancient coins of Thrace: http://www.corpus-nummorum.eu / Ulrike Peter
Source: Birinci Uluslararasi Anadolu Para Tarihi ve Numismatik Kongresi : bildiriler = First International Congress of the Anatolian Monetary History and Numismatics / editörler: Dortluk, KaĪhan, Oguī Tekin, RemīiĪe BoĪraī SeĪhan ; [İngiliīce editörü: Mark Wilson], - Antalya : Suna-İnan Kıraç Akdeniī MedeniĪetleri Araştırma Enstitüsü, 2014. - P. 481-486
Index: Pitchfork, Colin E.
Title: Two recent hoards of cistophori / Colin Pitchfork
Source: Journal of the Numismatic Association of Australia 17 (2006) p. 105-113
Index: Ripollès Alegre, Pere Pau 1953-
Title: La moneda en el área rural de Ebusus (siglo IV-I a.C.) / Pere Pau Ripollès ... [et al.]
Source: Ús i circulació de la moneda a la Hispània Citerior : XIII Curs d'Història Monetària d'Hispània [26 i 27 novembre 2009] / coord. científica, Marta Campo. - Barcelona : MNAC, Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya, 2009. - P. 105-135
Abstract: The study of the collection of coins presented by A. Martin to the MAEF, in 1991, coming from sporadic findings in rural areas of ibiza, has allowed us to improve our knowledge about the coinages circulating in Ebusus, between the 5th/4th centuries BC and the 1st BC. During this peri- od the monetary output of Ebusus covered, almost in its totality the bronze monetary needs of the island. The new collection also ratifies the levels of production in every period in which coins are grouped. The sample also attested the nonexistence of differences between the bronze coins used in an urban media and in necropolis and those that were used in rural and periurban context. By its size and weight it was an unsuitable coinage to cover payments with considerable quantity, due to his reduced value, but they show the intense and early monetization of Ebusus, already from early 3rd century BC.
Index: Schwabacher, Willy 1897-1972
Title: Die Münzen der Olynthos-Grabung : zu Hugo Gaebler's 'Fälschungen makedonischer Münzen II' / [W. Schwabacher]
Source: American Journal of Archaeology 42 (1938) 1 (January-March) p. 70-76, pl. 10-12
Index: Sheedy, Kenneth A.
Title: The heroic image and the portrait coinages of Lykian dynasts / Kenneth A. Sheedy
Source: Coins from Asia Minor and the East : selections from the Colin E. Pitchfork Collection / Nicholas Wright ; with contrib. by O. Bopearachchi ... [et al.]. - Sydney : Australian Centre for Ancient Numismatic Studies, 2011. - (Ancient coins in Australian collections ; vol. 2). - P. 23-29
Index: Stroobants, Fran
Title: De lokale bronsmuntslag in de regio van Pisidië en Pamphylië tijdens de derde eeuw n.C. / Fran Stroobants
Source: Terra Incognita 6 (2009-2010) p. 155-184
Abstract: This study aims to reconstruct and explain the rich civic coin production in Pisidia and Pamphylia during the third century AD, a period when these two regions in the southwest of Asia Minor went through a distinct military, socio-economic and monetary evolution. Firstly, a quantitative analysis is carried out to reconstruct a regional mean of coin production. Secondly, the observed patterns and evolutions are analysed by means of some urban case-studies. In many cases the cause for an increase in coin production can be related to an increased military presence and/or the organisation of large-scale agones hieroi. However, some cities show a lack of active minting when one of these phenomena occurred. When a city had other stocks of small change at their disposal, there seems to have been no necessity to mint their own coinage, even during periods of increased purchasing power. In this way, it is possible that some kind of regional system existed with cities increasing their coin production at alternating intervals and only when strictly necessary, depending on the presence of absence of external stocks of small change.
Index: Tal, Oren 1968-
Title: Negotiating identity in an international context under Achaemenid rule : the indigenous Persian-period coinages of Palestine as an allegory / Oren Tal
Source: The Judeans in the Achaemenid Age : negotiating identity in an international context / ed. by Oded Lipschits, Gary N. Knoppers, and Manfred Oeming. - Winona Lake : Eisenbrauns, 2011. - P. 445-459
Index: Tekin, Oğuī 1958-
Title: More coins of Agathocles, son of Lysimachus : a reattribution / Oğuī Tekin
Source: Birinci Uluslararasi Anadolu Para Tarihi ve Numismatik Kongresi : bildiriler = First International Congress of the Anatolian Monetary History and Numismatics / editörler: Dortluk, Kayhan, Oguz Tekin, Remziye Boyraz SeĪhan ; [İngiliīce editörü: Mark Wilson], - Antalya : Suna-İnan Kıraç Akdeniī MedeniĪetleri Araştırma Enstitüsü, 2014. - P. 559-574
Index: Troxell, Hyla A.
Title: Studies in the Macedonian coinage of Alexander the Great / Hyla A. Troxell
Series: Numismatic studies ; no. 21
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1997
Index: Vitale, Marco
Title: Zwei neue Prägephasen des ‘Koinon von LĪcaonia’ unter Antonieus Pius und Maximinus Thrax : neue Erkenntnisse zum Landtag der Eparchie Lycaonia / Marco Vitale
Source: Schweizer Münzblätter 240 (Dezember 2010) p. 103-111
Index: Wojan, Franck
Title: Trapézonte du Pont sous l'Empire romain : étude historique et corpus monétaire / Franck Wojan
Source: Revue Numismatique 162 (2006) p. 181-229, pl. 17-33
Abstract: The ancient Pontic city of Trapezus (now called Trabzon, in Turkey) issued a bronze coinage under the Roman Empire (between the reign of Trajan - 98-1 17 A.D. - and the reign of Philip - 244-249 A.D. - to be more precise). First of all, this article aims at putting the ancient city back in its historical context (Antiquity) and also in its geographical context (the South-East basin of Pontus-Euxinus and the Northern littoral of the Anatolian Peninsula). Nowadays, the following corpus lists a range of 259 items spread over 20 issues. To finish, some statistics will allow us to characterize the Trapezus monetary workshop, which more or less functioned like most of its neighbours', and whose purpose was to supply the city and its area with divisonal coins.
ROMAN NUMISMATICS
Index: Aarts, Joris Gerardus 1962-
Title: De munten : Romeins geld in een ‘gewoon’ boerendorp ? / Joris Aarts, Jelle Prins
Source: Een nederzetting en grafveld uit de Romeinse tijd op de Heesmortel bij Riethoven / Henk Hiddink ; met bijdr. van: Joris Aarts ... [et al.]. - Amsterdam : VUhbs-Vrije Universiteit, cop. 2013. - (Zuidnederlandse archeologische rapporten ; 51). - P. 91-100, 271-277
Index: Aitchison, Nicholas Boyter
Title: Roman wealth, native ritual : coin hoards within and beyond Roman Britain / N.B. Aitchison
Source: World Archaeology 20 (1988) 2 (October) p. 270-284
Abstract: Coin deposits constitute one of the more striking, and yet common, elements of the archaeological record of Roman Britain. However, their study is based upon assumptions concerning the motives behind deposition and distinctions made between hoards and other categories of coin find. This paper has two aims. Firstly, it seeks to demonstrate the inadequacy of current interpretations of coin hoards. Secondly, it attempts to broaden the analysis of coin hoards by considering also votive deposits of coins in areas peripheral to and beyond the frontiers of Roman Britain. Several common features between coin deposits within and beyond the province are identified, and the implications of these for the motives behind deposition -- and the nature of Romano-British society and economy -- are then considered.
Index: Alföldi, Maria Radnóti 1926-
Title: Die constantinische Goldprägung in Trier / Maria R. Alföldi
Source: Jahrbuch für Numismatik und Geldgeschichte 9 (1958) p. 99-139, pl. 4-11
Index: Berdeaux-Le Brazidec, Marie-Laure
Title: Fragments de trésors monétaires romains trouvés en Bretagne, conservés au musée d'Archéologie nationale / [Marie-Laure Berdeaux-Le Brazidec]
Source: Trésors monétaires. T. XXII: Trésors de l'Ouest de la France] / Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des monnaies, médailles et antiques ; [textes éd. par Michel Amandry]. - Paris : Bibliothèque nationale de France, 2007. - P. 207-248, pl. 27
Index: Duncan-Jones, Richard 1937-
Title: Money and government in the Roman Empire / Richard Duncan-Jones
Published: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1994
Abstract: Rome's conquests gave her access to the accumulated metal resources of most of the known world. An abundant gold and silver coinage circulated within her empire as a result. But coinage changes later suggest difficulty in maintaining metal supplies. By studying Roman coin-survivals in a wider context, Dr Duncan-Jones uncovers important facts about the origin of coin-hoards of the Principate. He constructs a new profile of minting, financial policy and monetary circulation, by analysing extensive coin evidence collected for the first time. His findings considerably advance ou knowledge of crucial areas of the Roman economy. This book will be an essential reference work for Roman historians and numismatists and will also be of interest to economic historians.
Index: Duncan-Jones, Richard 1937-
Title: Structure and scale in the Roman economy / Richard Duncan-Jones
Published: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1990
Abstract: This book considers important interlocking themes. Did the Roman Empire have a single 'national' economy, or was its economy localised and fragmented? Can coin and pottery survivals demonstrate the importance of long-distance trade? How fast did essential news travel by sea, and what does that imply about Mediterranean sailing-patterns? Further subjects considered include taxation, commodity-prices, demography, and army pay and manpower. The book is very wide-ranging in its geographical coverage and in the evidence that it explores. By analysing specific features of the economy the contrasting discussions examine important questions about its character and limitations, and about how surviving evidence should be interpreted. The book throws new and significant light on the economic life of Europe and the Mediterranean in antiquity, and will be valuable to ancient historians and students of European economic history.
Index: Elkins, Nathan T.
Title: Numismatics, Roman Imperial / Nathan T. Elkins
Published: Encyclopedia of global archaeology. Vo. 8 / Claire Smith, ed.. - New York : Springer Reference, 2014. - P. 5522-5529
Index: Ellams, Matthew
Title: Experiencing the Republican Empire : a numismatic perspective / Matthew Ellams ... [et al.]
Source: Journal of the Numismatic Association of Australia 25 (2014) p. 55-67
Abstract: This article takes three case studies of ‘Republican provincial coinage’ in the eastern Mediterranean as a starting point to examine what provincial coinage in the Roman Republic can reveal about Roman hegemony in this period. The case studies demonstrate the divergent experience of Roman power before the rule of Augustus; while in Boeotia Roman contact appears to have brought about a decline in minting, within Achaea production continued as the Romans used local coinage for their own (likely military) purposes. Finally an examination of the currency of Crete and Cyrenaica reveals how numismatic iconography from this period can reflect Roman conceptions of power, and the Roman perception of the regions they had conquered. These three case studies reveal the potential of this type of evidence, traditionally the prerogative of ‘Greek’ numismatists, in aiding our understanding of Roman expansion and Roman
ideologies.
Index: Elliott, Colin P.
Title: The acceptance and value of Roman silver coinage in the second and third centuries AD / by Colin P. Elliott
Published: London : Royal Numismatic Society, 2014
Note: Offprint from: Numismatic Chronicle 174 (2014) p. 129-152
Abstract: The debasement of imperial silver currency in the third century AD is one of the factors traditionally thought to have contributed to the collapse of the Augustan monetary system, which in turn is often regarded as part of a broader crisis. A comparison of the fineness and weight of imperial silver coinage with ancient sources which describe the changing role of argentarii and nummularii, the primary institutions for currency exchange and assay, reveals several important differences between the reaction to currency manipulations of the central government in the mid- to late second century as compared with those pursued almost a century later. However, if the value of imperial currency was partly or wholly related to its acceptability to coin-users, then the abundance or paucity of information from contemporary monetary experts may have had considerable influence upon the potential for wider economic crisis. A case can be made that this is what happened in the third century: in the face of increased efforts to secure over-valuation of currency, independent exchanges and assayers were crowded out of local markets. Changes to monetary institutions and their role within the monetary system of the Late Principate, may also help explain why the kinds of economic consequences which seem to have characterised the third century were not produced earlier.
Index: Fischer, Svante
Title: The coins in the grave of King Childeric / Svante Fischer & Lennart Lind
Source: Journal of Archaeology and Ancient History 14 (2015) p. 3-36
Abstract: This article contextualizes some one hundred mid- to late 5th century solidi and two hundred silver coins found in the grave of King Childeric in Tournai, Belgium. We argue that the coins in the grave must have been assembled for the specific purpose of the burial rite and that some of the participants in the burial rite were allowed to look at the coins before the grave was sealed. We argue that they were capable of identifying the various coins because they were literate and familiar with Roman iconography. It follows that the solidus hoard together with the other coins is a meaningful composition that has been manipulated for ideological purposes by Clovis himself. The coins must hence be explained in a manner that considers Clovis’ ideological motives, as the grave and its contents run contrary to all usual explanations.
Index: Geissler, Warner Reinhold 1807-
Title: Ueber die Aechtheitsbeurtheilung der antiken römischen Münzen / von Warner Reinhold Geissler
Published: Bautzen : Monse, 1871
Index: Ghesquière, Joseph H. 1731-1802
Title: Mémoire sur un dépôt de médailles romaines de grand bronze, déterré à Wareghem, village de la Châtellenie de Courtray, au mois de janvier 1778 / par M. l'Abbé Ghesquiere
Source: Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-arts de Belgique 4 (1783) p. 359-371
Index: Gorini, Giovanni 1941-
Title: Tesoretto di età repubblicana da ‘Forum Sempronii’ / Giovanni Gorini
Source: Forum Sempronii. I: Scavi e ricerche, 1974-2012 / a cura di Mario Luni e Oscar Mei. - Urbino : Quattro venti, cop. 2012. - (Quaderni di archeologia nelle Marche ; 17). - P. 139-154
Index: Heeren, Stijn 1976-
Title: Archeologisch onderzoek op de vindplaats van gouden munten en hakzilver uit de 5de eeuw bij Pey, gemeente Echt-Susteren / Stijn Heeren en Jan Roymans
Series: Zuidnederlandse archeologische rapporten ; 57
Published: Amsterdam : Archeologisch Centrum Vrije Universiteit, 2014
Index: Hollard, Dominique 1957-
Title: Deux doubles sesterces casqués inédits de Postume (261) / Hollard (Dominique)
Source: Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique 69 (2014) 9 (novembre) p. 279-282
Index: Hollard, Dominique 1957-
Title: Le fonds républicain du Cabinet des médailles de Paris / Hollard (Dominique)
Source: Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique 69 (2014) 10 (décembre) p. 288-295
Index: Hollard, Dominique 1957-
Title: Les siliques à signature SMCS de Constant II (409-411) / Hollard (Dominique)
Source: Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique 70 (2015) 1 (janvier) p. 18-20
Index: Köker, Hüseyin
Title: Roma İmparatorluk Dönemi Komama Sikkeleri / Hüseyin Köker
Source: Birinci Uluslararasi Anadolu Para Tarihi ve Numismatik Kongresi : bildiriler = First International Congress of the Anatolian Monetary History and Numismatics / editörler: Dortluk, KaĪhan, Oguī Tekin, RemīiĪe BoĪraī SeĪhan ; [İngiliīce editörü: Mark Wilson], - Antalya : Suna-İnan Kıraç Akdeniī MedeniĪetleri Araştırma Enstitüsü, 2014. - P. 345-359
Index: Kool, Robert
Title: The coins from a Roman-period farmstead at el-Qabu, south of Ashqelon / Robert Kool
Source: 'Atiqot 71 (September 2012) p. 35-46
Abstract: Fifty-seven bronze coins were found in several structures, installations and tombs at El-Qabu. Fifty-three of the coins, including a hoard of twenty-three bronzes, were identified. With the exception of two Hellenistic and three early Roman specimens, as well as a single Byzantine nummus (first half of the sixth century), all the isolated coins fall between the second half of the second century and the reign of Maximinian Herculius (286–305 CE). Among the early coins is a rare flan with a trapezoidal section, probably originating in Jerusalem. Another interesting and rare early find is a lead token minted under the Roman administration in Egypt in the first–second centuries CE. The hoard of 23 bronzes was found concealed in a small cavity that had been dug into a floor of beaten earth in Building 4. It consisted of a homogenous group of imperial and provincial bronzes, struck in a limited time range between the mid-second and mid-third centuries CE. The small monetary value of its contents seems to hint that it was deposited by the occupants of the structure.
Index: Metcalf, William Edwards
Title: The cistophori of Hadrian / by William E. Metcalf
Series: Numismatic studies ; 15
Published New York : American Numismatic Society, 1980
Index: Moorhead, Sam
Title: Coinage at the end of Roman Britain / by Sam Moorhead and Philippa Walton
Source: AD 410 : the history and archaeology of late and post-Roman Britain / ed. by F.K. Haarer ; with Rob Collins ... [et al.]. - London : Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies, 2014. – P. 99-116
Abstract: Coinage is probably the most tangible form of material culture dating to the late fourth and early fifth centuries A.D. As a result, numismatic evidence, and particularly hoards data, has played a pivotal role in dating the ‘end’ of Roman Britain. This article summarises the numismatic evidence for the period and illustrates how both hoards and site finds can be used to explore the chronology and nature of coin use throughout the diocese of Britannia and its apparent collapse in the post-Roman period.
Index: Moorhead, Sam
Title: Ever decreasing circles : the 'nummus' economy at Butrint (Albania) and beyond / Sam Moorhead
Source: Nomismatik kai oikonomik istora st n peiro kat t n archaiót ta : praktik tou 1ou Diethnoús sĪnedrou (Panepist mio Iōannnōn, 3-7 Oktōvrou 2007) = Numismatic history and economy in Epirus during Antiquity : proceedings of the 1st International Conference (University of Ioannina, October 3rd-7th 2007) / ed. by Katerini Liampi ... [et al.]. - Athēna : Etairea Melétēs Nomismatikēs kai Oikonomikēs Istoras, LĪda Lthos, 2013. - (Kerma ; 3). - P. 601-614
Abstract: Around 1500 late Roman and early Mediaeval nummi have been found on the Butrint Foundation excavations conducted in the Triconch Palace and the site at Diaporit. These coins date from the 4th century until the end of the 6th century and provide a great deal of information about the monetary economy of the site and the broader Mediterranean in late antiquity.
Index: Moorhead, Sam
Title: Expanding the frontiers : how the Portable Antiquities Scheme database increases knowledge of Roman coin use in England / Sam Moorhead
Source: A decade of discovery : proceedings of the Portable Antiquities Scheme Conference 2007 / ed. by Sally Worrell ... [et al.]. - Oxford : Archaeopress 2010. - (BAR British series ; 520). - P. 143-160
Index: Moorhead, Sam
Title: Silbury Hill, Wiltshire : Roman coins from the Silbury region / Sam Moorhead
Series: Research Department report series ; no. 102-2011
Published: Portsmouth : English Heritage, 2011
Abstract: Recent research has cast new light on the Romano-British roadside settlement adjacent to Silbury Hill. Work on the coins from the area by Sam Moorhead over a number of years has contributed greatly to this, and this report describes ten groups of coin finds. It makes available the catalogues of several assemblages which have not previously been fully published. Taken as a whole, the assemblages provide an interesting chronological profile for coin use / loss in the Silbury region which informs other research
into Roman activity in the region.
Index: Mora Serrano, Bartolomé 1960-
Title: El depósito de plomos monetiformes de las termas Alameda (¿Urgapa?), Málaga / por Bartolomé Mora Serrano
Source: Numisma 246 (2002) (enero-diciembre) p. 39-67
Abstract: A cache of coin-like lead pieces from the high imperial baths at Alameda, in the province of Malaga, offers a rare and valuable archaeological perspective to the 150 pieces that compose it, as well as to similar lead pieces recovered from the area surrounding the dig. The find gives special meaning to the urban usage of these numismatic pieces, whose reduced size and variety of designs, radiating heads, stars, and above all, simple combinations of small spheres, contrast with other lead pieces from mining and agricultural zones, which are better known.
Index: Mora Serrano, Bartolomé 1960-
Title: Moneda tardoantigua en Malaca (Málaga) : un ocultamiento monetario del siglo V d.C. procedente del teatro romano / por Bartolomé Mora Serrano
Source: Numisma 251 (enero-diciembre) p. 191-212
Abstract: The late occupation of the Roman theatre at Malaca (Malaga) is characterized by a rich archaeological record with the emphasis on coins. Together with the many isolated finds, we point out the recovery of several coin hoards which for the most part consist of coinage from the 4th century AD. The hoard examined here is chronologically the most recent of those documented so far, since the remaining archaeological material from the structures and particularly its composition and characteristics relate to coinage from the beginning of the 5th century AD. This very well-worn and clipped coinage, is established as having been concealed between the second quarter and the mid years of that century.
Index: Nollé, Johannes 1953-
Title: ‘Colonia und Socia der Römer’ : ein neuer Vorschlag zur Auflösung der Buchstaben ‘SR’ auf den Münzen von Antiocheia bei Pisidien / von Johannes Nollé
Source: Rom und der griechische Osten : Festschrift für Hatto H. Schmitt zum 65. Geburtstag, dargebracht von Schülern, Freunden und Münchener Kollegen / hrsg. von Ch. Schubert und K. Brodersen ; unter Mitarb. von U. Huttner. - Stuttgart : Steiner, 1995. - P. 350-370
Index: Paunov, Evgeni I. 1972-
Title: Actium and the 'legionary' coinage of Mark Antony : historical, economic and monetary consequences in Thrace (the coin evidence) / Eugeni I. Paunov, Ilya S. Prokopov
Source: Nomismatik kai oikonomik istora st n peiro kat t n archaiót ta : praktik tou 1ou Diethnoús sĪnedrou (Panepist mio Iōannnōn, 3-7 Oktōvrou 2007) = Numismatic history and economy in Epirus during Antiquity : proceedings of the 1st International Conference (University of Ioannina, October 3rd-7th 2007) / ed. by Katerini Liampi ... [et al.]. - Athēna : Etairea Melétēs Nomismatikēs kai Oikonomikēs Istoras, LĪda Lthos, 2013. - (Kerma ; 3). - P. 107-129, pl. 12-13
Abstract: After the battle off the Actium promontory on the South Epirote coast on 2 September 31 BC, the course of history in the Mediterranean was dramatically changed. For the conflict between the armies of Mark Antony and Octavian, there was active involvement of foreign troops. Thracian mercenaries and allies participated in the ground operations on both sides, all without seeing actual fighting. Days before the final battle the future king of Thrace Rhoemetalces I with his own cavalry force, deserted AntonĪ’s side and joined Octavian. Dicomes, chieftain of the Getae (from Northeast Thrace), promised
support to Antony but never appeared at Actium. In order to pay his army Mark Antony organized a large scale coinage in silver, the so called ‘legionary’ denarii, minted in the camp at Patrae in the winter of 32/31 BC. Subsequently, large quantities of this coinage appeared all around the Roman world, including the North – in Thrace and Macedonia. This paper treats aspects of the historical and economic consequences for the northern Balkan kingdoms and tribes after the 30’s BC, which resulted in the rapid transformation of these territories into Roman provinces. A major portion of the ‘legionary’ issue was filtered and transferred via Epirus and Thessaly to the north. These coins continued their circulation among soldiers, mercenaries and merchants in Thrace and other areas long after the defeat of Mark Antony. The paper also provides a survey of the main types of coins circulated in Thrace in the 2nd-1st c. BC, and how they changed over that period. All known coin hoards from Thrace (modern Bulgaria) with closing dates around or shortly after Actium (32/31-29/29 BC), are reviewed and analyzed – 17 deposits in total (table 1). A summary table of coin hoards with ‘legionary’ denarii in Europe (table 2) is also given. Further, a newly discovered coin hoard of 67 Republican denarii from Vratsa area (Northwestern Bulgaria), with couple of silver pieces of jewelry (2 bracelets, torque, 2 finger-rings), is also included for illustration and discussion (table 3, figs 2-4). The hoard closes with issues of Mark Antony and Cleopatra, Armenia devicta type, dated to 32 BC.
Index: Pink, Karl 1884-1965
Title: The triumviri monetales and the structure of the coinage of the Roman Republic / by Karl Pink
Series: Numismatic studies ; no. 7
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1952
Index: Quast, Dieter 1963-
Title: Velp und verwandte Schatzfunde des frühen 5. Jahrhunderts / Dieter Quast
Source: Acta Praehistorica et Archaeologica 41 (2009) p. 207-230
Abstract: Two treasure troves from the early 5th century, deposited independently, are known from Velp in the province of Gelderland in the Netherlands. The first one was found already in 1715 and contained five medaillons (Galla Placidia and Honorius), golden rings and ‘a huge amount of gold coins'. Those objects still preserved together weigh a little more than 250g. Seven golden neck-rings with punched decoration are the principal objects of the second treasure trove, found in 1851, together with two Roman gold fingerrings and two pieces of 'hacked gold'. With more than 530g of gold, this hoard is one of the richest found in the Frankish area. Neckrings of type Velp are known exclusively from some treasure troves from the Lower Rhine area; all of these belong to a horizon of treasure troves from nearly all of Europe. Reasons for the deposition of these hoards can’t be reconstructed with certaintĪ, but treasure troves with neck-rings of type Velp are only known from areas without contemporary richly furnished male burials. Members of the male elite apparently displayed their wealth by votive offerings during their lifetimes. Velp is characterised by its two treasures troves, and it can be assumed to have been an important early Frankish centre.
Index: Van Heesch, Johan 1955-
Title: Les monnaies augustéennes sur quelques sites belges : contribution à l'étude de la chronologie de l'occupation romaine du nord de la Gaule / Johan van Heesch
Source: Archaeological and historical aspects of West-European societies : album amicorum André van Doorselaer / Marc Lodewijckx (ed.). - Leuven : Leuven University Press, 1996. - (Acta archaeologica Lovaniensia. Monographiae ; 8). - P. 95-107
Index: Vitale, Marco
Title: ‘Iudaea recepta’ : eine neue Legende auf Goldmünzen Vespasians / [Marco Vitale]
Source: Ancient Society 44 (2014) p. 243-255
Abstracts: Until now, Roman representations of the first Jewish-Roman War of 66 73 AD on Flavian coins were thought to be quite coherent, describing Iudaea as having been captured or conquered: coin types circulated with the legends Iudaea capta, Iudaea devicta or [Victoria] de Iudaeis. In contrast herewith, Iudaea was not a foreign enemy or a newly annexed province, but a province already established. But now, for the first time in the Flavian coinage, the exceptional legend Iudaea recepta appears. Compared with the other types, the new recepta issue presents a historically and politically more accurate view of Rome’s triumph over the Jewish rebels. It indicates the pacification of a province. Similar proclamations are attested on Augustan coinage.
CELTIC NUMISMATICS
Index: Clarke, Roy Rainbird 1914-1963
Title: A hoard of silver coins of the Iceni from Honingham, Norfolk / by R. Rainbird Clarke
Source: British Numismatic Journal 28 (1955-1957) p. 1-10
Index: Doyen, Jean-Marc 1954-
Title: Deux fractions de statère ‘aux segments de cercle’, à la légende LVCOTIOS / Jean-Marc Doyen et Samuel Gouet
Source: Bulletin du Cercle d’Etudes Numismatiques 47 (2010) 1 (janvier–mai) p. 207-210
Index: Genechesi, Julia
Title: Les monnaies gauloises découvertes en territoire voconce / Genechesi (Julia)
Source: Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique 69 (2014) 6 (juin) p. 130-138
Index: Scheers, Simone 1943-
Title: The origins and evolution of coinage in Belgic Gaul / Simone Scheers
Source: Coinage and society in Britain and Gaul : some current problems / ed. by Barry Cunliffe. - London : The Council for British Archaeology, 1981
Index: Scheers, Simone 1943-
Title: Les statères bifaces du type Lummen-Niederzier, un monnayage éburon antérieur à la conquête romaine / Simone Scheers
Source: Archaeological and historical aspects of West-European societies : album amicorum André van Doorselaer / Marc Lodewijckx (ed.). - Leuven : Leuven University Press, 1996. - (Acta archaeologica Lovaniensia. Monographiae ; 8). - P. 87-94
BYZANTINE NUMISMATICS
Index: Curta, Florin
Title: Invasion or inflation? : sixth- to seventh-century Byzantine coin hoards in Eastern and Southeastern Europe / [Florin Curta]
Published: Annali dell'Istituto Italiano di Numismatica 43 (1996) p. 65-224
Index: Hahn, Wolfgang Reinhard Otto 1945-
Title: Moneta Imperii Byzantini. Bd. 1: Von Anastasius I. bis Justinianus I. (491-565) : einschliesslich der ostgotischen und vandalischen Prägungen / Wolfgang Hahn
Series: Denkschriften / Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-historische Klasse ; Bd. 109
Published: Wien : Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1973
Index: Hahn, Wolfgang Reinhard Otto 1945-
Title: Moneta Imperii Byzantini. Bd. 2: Von Justinus II. bis Phocas (565-610) : einschliesslich der Prägungen der Heraclius-Revolte und mit Nachträgen zum 1. Band / Wolfgang Hahn
Series: Denkschriften / Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-historische Klasse ; Bd. 119
Published: Wien : Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1975
Index: Hahn, Wolfgang Reinhard Otto 1945-
Title: Moneta Imperii Byzantini. Bd. 3: Von Heraclius bis Leo III. Alleinregierung : mit Nachträgen zum 1. und 2. Band / Wolfgang Hahn
Series: Denkschriften / Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-historische Klasse ; Bd. 148
Published: Wien : Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1981
Index: Hahn, Wolfgang Reinhard Otto 1945-
Title: Studies in early byzantine gold coinage / ed. by Wolfgang Hahn and William E. Metcalf
Series: Numismatic studies ; no. 17
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1988
Index: Kool, Robert
Title: Coins from the late Byzantine remains near Shiqmona / Robert Kool
Source: 'Atiqot 63 (June 2010) p. 219-223
Abstract: The coins from Shiqmona were uncovered in the remains of the monastery, the buildings, within the winepress and on the surface above the winepress. Out of the fifteen identified coins, fourteen date to one continuous period, from the early fourth century until the reign of the Byzantine emperor Justinian II; one is an Ayyubid copper fals. Comparison with the numismatic evidence from previous excavations at Shiqmona, in 1994 and 1998, shows similarities in periodization and types of coins in circulation.
Index: Moorhead, Sam
Title: Early Byzantine copper coins found in Britain : a review of new finds recorded with the Portable Antiquities Scheme / Sam Moorhead
Published: Istanbul : Ege Yayinlari, 2009
Note: Ancient history, numismatics and epigraphy in the mediterranean world : studies in memory of Clemens E. Bosch and Sabbahat Atlan and in honour of Nezahat Baydur / ed. bĪ Oğuī Tekin ; in collab. with AliĪe Erol. - Istanbul : Ege Yayinlari, 2009. - P. 263-274
EARLY MEDIEVAL NUMISMATICS
Index: Blunt, Christopher Evelyn 1904-1987
Title: Four Italian coins imitating Anglo-Saxon types / by C.E. Blunt
Source: British Numismatic Journal 25 (1945-1948) p. 282-285
Index: Carlà, Filippo 1980-
Title: Regionaliīīaīione e frammentaīione dell’area monetaria romana in età tardoantica : il caso dell’oro / Filippo Carlà
Published: Trieste : Ed. Università di Trieste, 2012
Note: Offprint from: Incontri di Filologia Classica 10 (2010-2011) p. 121-143
Abstract: The concept of ‘regionaliīation’ appears frequentlĪ in historical studies to describe the different forms of ‘fragmentation’ which are connected with the progressive disappearance of the political, institutional, economic, social and cultural structures which had characterized the Late Roman Empire. Theme of this article is an analysis of the process through which the Late Antique monetary system, based in the 4th century CE on a common ‘monetarĪ area’ extended to the entire Empire, split in different ‘regional sĪstems’, clearlĪ recogniīable since the end of the 6th and the 7th century CE. Only gold urrency is here taken into consideration, both because it circulated on a parallel and independent circuit, and because the high economic and symbolic value of this metal attracted towards it a great deal of attention, both from ancient authors (such as Procopius) and from modern historians (such as Henri Pirenne).
Index: Carlà, Filippo 1980-
Title: Il sistema monetario in età tardoantica : spunti per una revisione / [Filippo Carlà]
Source: Annali dell’Istituto Italiano di Numismatica 53 (2007) p. 155-218
Index: Cruysheer, Anton T.E.
Title: De Karolingische schatvondst Bikbergen 1992 / Anton Cruysheer, Bouke Jan van der Veen, Olaf Langendorff
Source: De Beeldenaar 39 (2015) 2 p. 83-86
Index: Dolley, Reginald Hugh Michael 1926-1983
Title: A new tĪpe and moneĪer for Eadbearht ‘Praen’ / by R.H.M. Dolley
Source: British Numismatic Journal 28 (1955-1957) p. 243-248
Index: Dolley, Reginald Hugh Michael 1926-1983
Title: Two stray finds from St Albans of coins of Offa and of Charlemagne / by R.H.M. Dolley and D.M. Metcalf
Source: British Numismatic Journal 28 (1955-1957) p. 459-466
Index: Haigh, Daniel Henry 1819-1879
Title: An essay on the numismatic history of the ancient kingdom of the East Angles / by D. H. Haigh
Published: Leeds : T.W. Green, 1845
Index: Jarrett, Jonathan
Title: Currency change in pre-millennial Catalonia : coinage, counts and economics / Jonathan Jarrett
Source: Numismatic Chronicle 169 (2009) p. 217-243
Index: Kiudsoo, Mauri
Title: The first Late Viking Age sacrificial deposit from Estonia / Mauri Kiudsoo & Ivar Leimus
Source: Tutkimusta ja keräilyä : Suomen Numismaattinen Yhdistys 1914-2014 / toimittaja: Tuukka Talvio. - Helsinki : Suomen Numismaattinen Yhdistys, 2014. - (Suomen Numismaattisen Yhdistyksen julkaisuja ; 7). - P. 28-36
Index: Leimus, Ivar 1953-
Title: The Viking-Age hoard of Linnakse : some observations / Ivar Leimus, Mauri Kiudsoo and Ülle Tamla
Source: Early medieval monetary history : studies in memory of Mark Blackburn / ed. by Rory Naismith, Martin Allen and Elina Screen. - Farnham : Ashgate, 2014. - P. 571-621
Abstract: On 17 August 2010 a Late Viking period hoard (tpq. 1059), consisting of silver coins, pieces of silver jewellery and fragments of hand-moulded ceramic vessel, was brought to the Institute of History, University of Tallinn (Figs 1; 2: 1–8). This remarkable discovery had been made a day earlier in a recently harvested field in the village of Linnakse (North-Estonia, county of Anija) using a metal detector. The finder of the hoard also handed over a number of bronze and iron artefacts from three different periods: the Roman, the Middle and the Late Iron Age. The artefacts, all of them with marks of intentional damage or fire deformation, had been found in the same field 20–50 m south of the find-spot of the hoard. The exact circumstances of the discovery remained unclear due to the urgent need to excavate the silver hoard. Therefore it was decided to proceed with archaeological investigation, including landscape survey and trial excavations, at the site.
Index: Marani, Flavia
Title: Note sulla circolazione monetaria tardoantica nel Lazio meridionale : i reperti di S. Ilario ‘ad bivium’ / Flavia Marani
Source: Proceedings of the XIVth International Numismatic Congress, Glasgow 2009. II / ed. by Nicholas Holmes. - Glasgow : International Numismatic Commission, 2011. – P. 1535-1541
Index: Meyer, Godelieve M. de 1923-2001
Title: De herkomst van het zilver uit de vroegmiddeleeuwse Friese munten / G.M. de Meyer en C.F.M. Koch
Source: Jaarboek voor Middeleeuwse Geschiedenis 5 (2002) p. 7-26
Index: Roehrich, Auguste 1872-1957
Title: Les monnaies mérovingiennes frappées sur le territoire de la Suisse / par A. Roehrich
Source: Schweizerische Numismatische Rundschau 31 (1944) p. 6-24
Index: Wilde, Carl Wilhelm Ignatius 1858-1936
Title: Een belangrijke muntvondst te Escharen / [C. Wilde]
Source: Studiën op Godsdienstig, Wetenschappelijk en Letterkundig Gebied n.r. 49 (1897) p. 169-198
MEDIEVAL & MODERN NUMISMATICS
Index: Aerts, Erik 1955-
Title: Organisatie en techniek van de muntfabricage in de Zuidelijke Nederlanden tijdens het Ancien Régime / [Erik Aerts, Eddy Van Cauwenberghe]
Source: Jaarboek van het Europees Genootschap voor Munt- en Penningkunde (1987) p. 7-144
Index: Beek, Bert van 1944-
Title: De munten van Leiden, geslagen tijdens de belegeringen van 1573 en 1574 / door E.J.A. van Beek
Source: Jaarboekje voor Geschiedenis en Oudheid van Leiden en Omstreken 66 (1974) p. 51-61
Index: Beuth, Lodewijk Simon 1900-1980
Title: Geschiedenis van en geheimschrift op de Zeeuwse zilveren dukaten van 1659-1798 / door Lod. S. Beuth
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 42 (1955) p. 41-70, pl. 3-4
Abstract: On July the 9th 1659 a new coin was instituted: the silver ducat. Its type was taken from the gold ducat, its value fixed at 50 stiver. It was withdrawn in 1847. By far the largest part of the silver ducats, handed in between 1842 and 1849, were Zeeland coins which were - wrongly - supposed to be of higher alloy. About 19 million pieces must have been struck between 1695 and 1798, the date of the last emission just before the closing-down of the Zeeland mint in 1799. For the present study, the Zeeland silver ducats in 18 public and about 50 private collections have been examined and registered. In this way, the relative rarities could be estimated and the various types and variations distinguished. As in those days practically each new die caused a more or less slight variation, the latter are mostly limited to intentional alterations. The types are the following: 1. 1659-1668 hammered 2. 1672-1680 milled 3. 1694-1721 hammered, coarse workmanship 4. 1727-1750 milled 5. 1757-1798 milled and edged. Another division is added, based on the characteristics of the successive mintmasters and die-cutters and the quality of their work. Special attention is given to the mintmaster Martinus Holtzhey (1752-1764) and his son. A symbolical significance is detected in the occurrence of single or double loops in the ornament and an allusion to their family life which is partly confirmed by data from the archives.
Index: Brégianni, Catherine
Title: Monetary crises in Greece during the 19th century : Greek membership in the Latin Monetary Union and numismatic issues / Catherine Brégianni
Source: Documents and studies on 19th c. monetary history. Moneys and economies during 19th century (from Europe to Asia) : proceedings of the Round Table of the ‘Silver MonetarĪ Depreciation and International Relations’ program (ANR DAMIN, LabEx TransferS), Paris, École Normale Supérieure, January 13-14, 2012 / G. Depeyrot, ed.. - Wetteren : Moneta 2012. - (Collection Moneta ; 139). - P. 27-38
Index: Brégianni, Catherine
Title: Monetary mechanisms and numismatic representations in the era of the first globalisation : the Greek paradigm of the 19th century / Catherine Brégianni
Source: Three conferences on international monetary history : Business with Money : monetary politics and capital flows in the era of the first globalization ..., Paris ..., 30 Aug-1 Sept 2012 ; Small change: bronze or copper coins from antiquity to 19th c., ... Paris, May 13-14, 2013 ; Transfers of precious metals and their consequences, 16th-19th c. ..., Madrid, ..., May 16-17, 2013 / G. Depeyrot, ed. ; with the cooperation of C. Brégianni and M. Kovalchuk. - Wetteren : Moneta, 2013. - ((Collection Moneta ; 156). - P. 19-42
Index: Bullowa, David Mark 1912-1953
Title: The commemorative coinage of the United States, 1892-1938 / by David M. Bullowa
Series: Numismatic notes and monographs ; no. 83
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1938
Index: Carlyon-Britton, Philip William Poole 1863-1938
Title: The Saxon, Norman and Plantagenet coinage of Wales / by P.W.P. Carlyon-Britton
Source: British Numismatic Journal 2 (1905) p. 31-56
Index: Cicali, Cristina
Title: Un fiorino piccolo arcaico fra i nominali rinvenuti a Rocca San Silvestro e le probabili emissioni di questa moneta nel XIII secolo / Cristina Cicali, Alessio Montàgano, Massimo Sozzi
Source: Archeologia Medievale 33 (2006) p. 547-550
Index: Croes, Franciscus Huijbertus 1803-1855
Title: Catalogus van twee zeer belangrijke verzamelingen antieke en hedendaagsche gouden, zilveren en koperen penningen en munten ... zijnde de eerste nagelaten door... F.H. Croes : welke verkocht zullen worden ... den 19den Augustus 1856 ... te Amsterdam, door Cornelis François Rood, Gerrit de Vries Jz. en Willem Jodocus Matthias Engelberts ...
Published: [Amsterdam : s.n., 1856]
Index: De Ketelaere, Sander
Title: Muntschat te Gistel : numismatiek in archeologie / Sander De Ketelaere
Published: [Gent] : Universiteit Gent, [2013]
Index: Eeghen, Pieter van 1844-1907
Title: De Munt [van Amsterdam] / redevoering uitgesproken door den voorzitter P. van Eeghen
Source: Jaarverslag in de negen en twintigste algemeen vergadering op maandag 9 mei 1887 [van het Koninklijk Oudheidkundig Genootschap te Amsterdam] p. 37-47
Index: Elmore Jones, Francis 1898-1982
Title: Norwich or Northampton : a ‘shortcross’ problem / bĪ F. Elmore Jones
Source: British Numismatic Journal 33 (1963) p. 6-11, pl. 10
Index: Fasel, W. Anton 1930-
Title: Muntslag in Alkmaar? / [W.A. Fasel]
Source: Oud Alkmaar 7 (1983) 4 p. 554-556
Index: Fasel, W. Anton 1930-
Title: [Muntslag in Alkmaar?] Inderdaad een hypothese / door W.A. Fasel
Source: Oud Alkmaar 11 (1987) p. 12-13
Index: Feenstra, Alberto
Title: Coins as gauge for growth : VOC-'doits' to probe Java’s deep monetisation, 1700–1800 / Alberto Feenstra
Series: CGEH working paper series ; no. 49
Published: Utrecht] : Centre for Global Economic History, 2013
Abstract: During the eighteenth century the VOC imported over a billion small copper coins (doits) to Java, which is a remarkable operation for the world’s largest enterprise at that time, since these coins were unfit to paĪ for the companĪ’s wholesale trade. This paper argues that the VOC responded to Java’s specific need for small coins, because people increasingly relied on the market for daily necessities and became less dependent on subsistence farming. The alternative explanations of population growth, substitution and inflation do not satisfactorily explain the increased demand for these copper doits. Therefore, this paper proposes that Java’s economĪ underwent a transformation, particularly after 1750.
Index: Francis, Grant R.
Title: James I crowns : new discoveries / by Grant R. Francis
Source: British Numismatic Journal 16 (1921-1922) p. 123-128
Index: Gelder, Hendrik Enno van 1916-1998
Title: Aanvulling op ‘De munten van hertog Karel van Gelre, geslagen na īijn dood (1538-1543)’ / door H. Enno van Gelder
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 43 (1956) p. 32-35
Index: Gelder, Hendrik Enno van 1916-1998
Title: Het Hollandse muntwezen onder het huis Wittelsbach. [1] / door H. Enno van Gelder
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 39 (1952) p. 1-26, pl. 1-2
Index: Gelder, Hendrik Enno van 1916-1998
Title: Het Hollandse muntwezen onder het huis Wittelsbach. [2] / door H. Enno van Gelder
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 46 (1959) p. 27-81, pl. 6-8
Index: Gelder, Hendrik Enno van 1916-1998
Title: Stempels van Zeeuwse zilveren dukaten / [H.E.v.G.]
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 56-57 (1968-1969) p. 124-130
Index: Gogel, Isaac Jan Alexander 1765-1821
Title: Catalogus van twee zeer belangrijke en fraaije verzamelingen gouden, zilvere, bronzen en koperen penningen en munten, zoo antieke als hedendaagsche en
vroedschapspenningen ... afkomstig uit de nalatenschap van ... J.J.A. Gogel ... benevens ... penningen betrekkelijk de boekdrukkunst, vroeger nagelaten door Jacobus Koning : al hetwelk verkocht zal worden ... den 9den October 1855 ... te Amsterdam door Cornelis François Roos, Gerrit de Vries Jz. en Willem Jodocus Matthias Engelberts ...
Published: [Amsterdam : s.n.], 1855
Index: Gordus, Adon A.
Title: Une curieuse fausse monnaie de Henri III de l'atelier de Riom / Gordus (Adon A.), Blet-Lemarquand (Maryse), Bompaire (Marc)
Source: Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique 63 (2008) 6 (juin) p. 99-110
Index: Haanen, Emile 1947-2014
Title: Bijdragen aan de muntgeschiedenis van de heerlijkheid en het graafschap Horn (± 1270-1567) / Emile Haanen
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 101 (2014) p. 58-123
Index: Hazlitt, William Carew 1834-1913
Title: The coinage of the European continent : with an introduction and catalogues of mints dominations and rulers / by W. Carew Hazlitt
Published: London : Swan Sonnenschein ; New York : Macmillan, 1893
Index: Kerkwijk, Adolf Octave van 1873-1957
Title: De stempelsnijders werkzaam aan de Munt te Dordrecht van 1576-1806. I / [A.O. van Kerkwijk]
Source: Jaarboek van Munt- en Penningkunde 7 (1920) p. 29-61
Index: Kerkwijk, Adolf Octave van 1873-1957
Title: De stempelsnijders werkzaam aan de Munt te Dordrecht van 1576-1806. II / [A.O. van Kerkwijk]
Source: Jaarboek van Munt- en Penningkunde 8 (1921) p. 41-67
Index: Leimus, Ivar Akselevic 1953-
Title: Über die Beziehungen zwischen Münzstätten in Tallinn (Reval) und Finnland in den 1520er Jahren / Ivar Leimus
Published: Scripta varia numismatico Tuukka Talvio sexagenario dedicata / [toimittaja Outi Järvinen]. - Helsinki : Suomen Numismaattinen Yhdistys, 2008. - (Suomen Numismaattisen Yhdistyksen Julkaisuja ; 6). - P. 123-131
Abstract: The paper discusses some written sources from the Tallinn City Archives dealing with minting in Turku by mintmaster Leinhart Pauwermann who is known to have struck coins for Tallinn's burgomaster Jakob Richerdes in Turku and Tallinn in 1523–1524. The sources suggest that in 1522 Leinhart Pauwermann permanently lived in Turku and most probably minted shillings of the Visby type (but with the character L as the minter's sign) for the famous pirate Søren Norby who was granted Western Finland by the King of Denmark. This means that Norby's minting should have started in Visby, too, in 1522 at latest, instead of 1523 as was believed before. Also, closer scrutiny of the sources reveals that there was no such mint master as Keynert Ponnemann in Turku in 1528. The corresponding document dates from 1524, in fact, and names the well-known mintmaster Leinhart Pauwermann, who is referred to as having died in 1526 according
to another letter.
Index: Lupton, David F.
Title: The minting of platinum roubles. Pt. II: The platinum roubles of Heraeus / by David F. Lupton
Source: Platinum Metals Review 48 (2004) 2 (april) p. 72-78
Abstract: Heraeus has in its possession four platinum rouble coins and one commemorative platinum medallion minted between 1826 and 1844. In order to determine their composition and to learn a little more about the methods used in their manufacture, they have been subjected to various techniques of non-destructive examination. These have included a developmental SQUID microscope specifically used to look at magnetic effects due to the iron content.
Index: Man, Marie Goverdina Antonia de 1855-1944
Title: De grafelijke Munt van Zeeland en de balansmeesters die er voor hebben gewerkt / [M.G.A. de Man]
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 9 (1922) p. 41-69
Index: Man, Marie Goverdina Antonia de 1855-1944
Title: Over onze oudste grafelijk-Hollandsche munten, waaronder enkele, die met vrome doeleinden moeten zijn geslagen / [M.G.A. de Man]
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 10 (1923) p. 40-57, pl. 1
Index: Meijer, Johannes Frederik George 1815-1889
Title: De munten van Hendrik van Brederode / [J.F.G. Meijer]
Source: Algemeene Konst- en Letterbode (1855) 45-47 p. 360-361, 367-368, 374-375
Index: Montàgano, Alessio
Title: Il fiorino piccolo battuto con la I serie del fiorino nuovo da dodici denari / Alessio Montàgano, Massimo Sozzi
Published: Milano: Società Numismatica Italiana Onlus, 2008
Note: Offprint from: Rivista Italiana di Numismatica 109 (2008) p. 287-293
Index: Mossman, Philip L.
Title: Money of the American colonies and confederation : a numismatic, economic and historical correlation / by Philip L. Mossman
Series: Numismatic studies ; no. 20
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1993
Index: Pop-Jansen, Margreeth L.
Title: Geld in Alkmaar : opstellen over geld en penningen in relatie tot Alkmaar / onder red. van M.L. Pop-Jansen en C. Streefkerk
Series: Oud Alkmaar ; 17.4
Published: [Alkmaar] : Historische vereniging Oud-Alkmaar, cop. 1993
Index: Posthumus, Jacob
Title: Catalogus van fraaije gouden, zilveren en koperen penningen en munten, gedeeltelijk nagelaten bij ... Jacob Posthumus Pietersz. : hetwelk met en benevens eene zeer uitmuntende verzameling teekeningen, en een zeer uitgebreid kabinet prenten, verkocht zal worden op Maandag, den 4den December 1820 ..., door de makelaars: Jeronimo de Vries ...
Published: Amsterdam : B.J. Crajenschot, [1820]
Index: Pot, Leo 1946-
Title: Muntslag van Egmond : een aardige hypothese / door J.L. Pot
Source: Oud Alkmaar 10 (1986) p. 743-749
Index: Potter, W.J.W.
Title: Henry VIII : the sequence of marks in the second coinage / / by W.J.W. Potter
Source: British Numismatic Journal 28 (1955-1957) p. 560-567
Index: Puister, A.T.
Title: Een nieuwe datering van de denarii van de graven uit het Hollandse huis / door A.T. Puister
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 44 (1957) p. 17-27
Index: Rammelman Elsevier, Willem Iman Cornelis 1810-1885
Title: Over het muntwezen tijdens het beleg van Leiden, A° 1573 en 1574 / medegedeeld door W.J.C. Rammelman Elsevier
Source: Berigten van het Historisch Genootschap te Utrecht 1.2 (1848) p. 5-15
Index: Raub, Christoph J.
Title: The minting of platinum roubles. Pt. I: History and current investigations / by Christoph J. Raub
Source: Platinum Metals Review 48 (2004) 2 (april)
Abstract: Nineteenth century Russian roubles are collectors items, but because of their history, there is a question over each one whether it is a genuine Russian rouble or a forgery. There has been some prior research and analysis on the platinum used to make these roubles and on their method of manufacture. As W. C. Heraeus and Johnson Matthey both hold small collections of roubles never before investigated, it was decided to see what could be found out about them and what this could tell us about their origins.
Index: Rehren, Thilo
Title: The minting of platinum roubles. Pt. IV: Platinum roubles as an archive for the history of platinum production / by Thilo Rehren
Source: Platinum Metals Review 50 (2006) 3 (july)
Abstract: This paper augments a series of articles on Russian roubles in this Journal (1–3) with a summary of recent research into the manufacturing history and materials characterisation of these coins. The results are not only significant for the identification of genuine roubles issued between 1828 and 1845, ‘Novodel’issues produced in the late 19th century, and outright forgeries of the 20th century, but offer a fascinating insight into the difficulties encountered at the time in the large-scale refining and processing of
platinum metal. A range of instrumenta methods have been used to elucidate the magnetic properties, chemical composition and low density of genuine roubles, and to reveal their complex internal structure. The resulting new insights into the historical practice of platinum metallurgy are unbiased by concerns about industrial espionage, state secrets, and professional rivalry.
Index: Réthy, László 1851-1914
Title: Corpus nummorum Hungariae : magyar egyetemes éremtár. Köt. I: Arpádházi királyok kora / irta Réthy Lázló
Published: Budapest : Magyar tudományos akadémia, 1899
Index: Réthy, László 1851-1914
Title: Corpus nummorum Hungariae = Magyar egyetemes éremtár. Köt. II: Vegyesházi királyok kora / irta Réthy László
Published: Budapest : Hornyánszky Viktor Csász. és Királyi Udvari Könyvnyomdája, 1907
Index: Sarcinelli, Giuseppe
Title: Rinvenimenti monetali da Fiorentino (1988-1994) / Giuseppe Sarcinelli
Source: Fiorentino ville désertée : nel contesto della Capitanata medievale (ricerche 1982-1993) / a cura di Maria Stella Calò Mariani ... [et al.] ; introd. Maria Stella Calò Mariani. - Rome : École française de Rome, 2012. – P. 521-538
Index: Sassen, August Hendrik 1853-1913
Title: De Hollandsche en Westfriesche duiten : 1739-1780 / [Aug. Sassen]
Source: Tijdschrift voor Munt- en Penningkunde 20 (1912) p. 187-195
Index: Serrure, Constant Antoine 1835-1898
Title: Onuitgegevene munten van Brabant / [C.A. Serrure]
Source: Vaderlandsch Museum 5 (1863) p. 401-402, pl. 1-2
Index: Stoll, Hans-Joachim
Title: Die Münzschatzgefäße auf dem Gebiet der DDR von den Anfängen bis zum Jahre 1700 / Hans-Joachim Stoll
Series: Weimarer Monographien zur Ur- und Frühgeschichte ; 12
Published: Weimar : Museum für Ur- und Frühgeschichte Thüringens, 1985
Index: Torongo, Paul A.
Title: The coins of the Albecq hoard (1995) / Paul Torongo & Raymond van Oosterhout
Published: [S.l. : the authors], cop. 2015
Abstract: In March 1995, a small coin hoard was found on the Isle of Guernsey during routine archeological excavations at Albecq. The coins were discovered 'on the eastern edge of Building 3, just above the eroding coastline' (de Jersey, p. 6) [1]. The find consisted of 18 silver coins, 4 of which were leeuwengroten and therefore of interest to authors Torongo and van Oosterhout.
Index: Torongo, Paul A.
Title: The coins of the Flanders hoard (1914-1918) / Paul Torongo & Raymond van Oosterhout
Published: [S.l. : the authors], cop. 2015
Abstract: During the First World War (1914-1918), a small coin hoard of 10 medieval coins was discovered in Flanders in Belgium and subsequently brought to the United Kingdom.
Index: Torres, Julio Lázaro
Title: Auge y caída de la acuñación a volante. Mariano González de Sepúlveda y Apolinar Rubio
Source: Numisma 254 (enero-diciembre 2010) p. 225-267
Abstract: This paper forms part of a series entitled 'The rise and fall of screw press minting' that aims to look at the process of modernization of coin manufacture in Spain through the traineeships abroad and the technology transfers or imports. We trace the figure of Mariano Gonzalez de Sepulveda who was the driving force, firstly, behind the introduction of the Swiss Jean-Pierre Droī’s innovations, and later, behind the introduction of the system of the Frenchman Philippe Gengembre. A further personage, Apolinar Rubio, known to date exclusively by the appearance of his name on a medal, also becomes a topic of interest on account of unpublished archive documents that enables a good part of his biography to be brought to light.
Index: Vermeulen, Pieter Jacobus 1809-1878
Title: Over de Hollandsche Maagd en den Bijbel op onze oude munt / [P.J. Vermeulen]
Source: Kronijk van het Historisch Genootschap gevestigd te Utrecht 21 (1865) p. 166-171
Index: Vries, Jeronimo de 1776-1853
Title: Catalogus van het zeer belangrijke en uitgebreide kabinet Grieksche, Romeinsche, algemeene- en Nederlandsche historie- en andere gedenkpenningen, benevens eene uitmuntende verzameling penningkundige boeken, penningkasten, enz. : alles ... bijeenverzameld door ... Jeronimo de Vries ... : alle welke verkocht zullen worden op Maandag den 23sten Januarij 1854 en volgende dagen ... ten huize van C.F. Roos ... te Amsterdam, door Cornelis François Roos, Johannes Albertus Brondgeest en Gerrit de Vries Jz. ....
Published: [Amsterdam : s.n.], 1854
Index: Wiel, Hendrik Jan van der 1920-1994
Title: De Utrechtse daalders / door H.J. van der Wiel
Source: Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde 55 (1968) p. 46-51, pl. 2
Abstract: In the period after the introduction of the silver ducat in 1659 the provincies of the Netherlands seriously disagreed on the advisability of a further debasement of the coinage. The province of Zealand took the initiative by introducing a daalder of 30 stuivers. This example was followed by several other provinces and towns. The province of Utrecht struck the daalder between 1685 and 1692. The author describes the three different types of daalders of this province. In addition he gives an indication of the degree of rarity of each date by comparing their occurrence in hoards, collections and dealers' offers.
Index: Willey, David B.
Title: The minting of platinum roubles. Pt. III: The platinum roubles of Johnson Matthey / by David B. Willey and Allin S. Pratt
Source: Platinum Metals Review 48 (2004) 3 (july)
Abstract: It is not known for certain how four platinum roubles came to be in Johnson MattheĪ’s possession. There is rumour that, at the end of World War I, A. B. Coussmaker of Johnson Matthey, negotiated with the White Russians to smuggle out of Russia a hoard of coins which had been withdrawn by the government years before. The hoard was reputed to be on a train to the West when the Reds caught up with it. Rather than stop the transaction, they thought it a good idea as it would raise capital for them – at that time, the refining capacity of the young U.S.S.R. had been disrupted. So they took over the deal and let the consignment continue its journey to Johnson Matthey where it was refined and the platinum sold on their behalf. However, this is speculation (1). Eye witnesses state that two roubles were definitely in the companĪ’s possession in 1956, and that two more came from the desk of Dr Leslie B. Hunt, the founder of this Journal (1). The roubles have thus been in Johnson MattheĪ’s possession for almost 50 Īears and probably for longer. More likely to be true is a brief note in a typewritten statement in the possession of Johnson MattheĪ, stating no more than “the specimens formed part of a consignment sent to Johnson MattheĪ for refining about 1870” (2). As there is always interest in platinum coins and particularly in Russian roubles which were the first platinum coins to be minted, it was decided to investigate the metal content of the Johnson Matthey roubles to find if they conformed to recognised Russian roubles – or were forgeries.
Index: Zimmermann, Lajos
Title: Pótlék a Corpus nummorum Hungariae : magyar egyetemes éremtár. Füzet. 1: Arpádházi királyok pénzel / irta: Lajos Zimmermann
Published: Budapest : Hornyánszky Viktor Csász. és Királyi Udvari Könyvnyomdája, 1907
ISLAMIC NUMISMATICS
Index: Balog, Paul 1900-1982
Title: The coinage of the Mamlūk sultans of EgĪpt and SĪria / Paul Balog
Series: Numismatic studies ; no. 12
Published New York : American Numismatic Society, 1964
Index: Eldem, Edhem 1960-
Title: Chaos and half measures : the Ottoman monetary ´system´ of the nineteenth century / Edhem Eldem
Source: The economic development of southeastern Europe in the 19th century / ed. by Edhem Eldem and Socrates Petmezas. - Athens : Alpha Bank, Historical Archives, 2011. - P. 251-305
Index: Kool, Robert
Title: The coins from Khirbat el-Thahiriya / Robert Kool
Source: 'Atiqot 71 (September 2011) p. 73-77
Abstract: Twenty-six bronze and copper coins were recovered from a large building (a farmhouse or monastery) and an adjacent olive press at Khirbat el-Thahiriya, dating to the Byzantine and Abbasid periods. The earliest datable coin is an isolated stray find of a bronze Hasmonean prutah, minted by Alexander Jannaeus (104–76 BCE). The majority of the coins span a relatively short period, beginning in the fifth–sixth centuries and ending in the mid-eighth century CE.
Index: Kool, Robert
Title: Coins from the Mamluk and Ottoman periods at Ramla / Robert Kool
Source: 'Atiqot 67 (July 2011) p. 55-60
Abstract: The excavations at the Central Bus Station in Ramla brought to light 74 coins, of which 55 were identified. Except for five residual finds dating to the Byzantine period and one thirteenth-century Crusader copper, the coin finds can be dated securely to the mid-fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries CE. These are copper fulus that are regularly found in sites of the period.
Index: Kool, Robert
Title: The coins from the al-Wata Quarter, Safed (Zefat) / Robert Kool
Source: 'Atiqot 78 (July 2014) p. 139-142
Abstract: Thirty-one coins, two of silver and the remainder of bronze and copper, were recovered from the al-Wata quarter in Safed (Zefat). Nineteen of the coins were identified. The earliest are two intrusive coins from the Byzantine period (fourth–second half of the sixth centuries CE). The remaining coins are mostly low-value Mamlūk copper denominations (thirteenth–fourteenth centuries CE), including two identical ‘fesse’ fulus of Lāj n. In addition, an irregularlĪ-shaped dirham fraction was found. Such small silver fractions were minted in large quantities during BaĪbars’ reign at his Damascus mint and apparently circulated widely in medieval Syria. The latest coin is a silver para from the Ottoman period (seventeenth century CE).
Index: Miles, George Carpenter 1904-1975
Title: Contributions to Arabic metrology. II: Early Arabic glass weights and measure stamps in the Benaki Museum, Athens, and the Peter Ruthven collection, Ann Arbor / by Georges C. Miles
Series: Numismatic notes and monographs ; no. 150
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1963
Index: Nicol, Norman Douglas 1947-
Title: The Post-Ottoman conquest coinage of Egypt / Norman D. Nicol
Source: The 2nd Simone Assemani symposium on islamic coins / ed. by Bruno Callegher and Arianna D'Ottone. - Trieste : EUT, 2010. - (Polymnia ; 1). - P. 220-231
Index: Nicol, Norman Douglas 1947-
Title: Some additions to A corpus of Fāṭimid coins / Norman D. Nicol
Source: The 3rd Simone Assemani symposium on Islamic coins / ed. by Bruno Callegher and Arianna D'Ottone. - Trieste : EUT, 2012. - (Polymnia ; 3). - P. 101-105
TOKENS
Index: Doty, Richard G. 1942-2013
Title: The token : America's other money / ed. by Richard G. Doty
Series: Proceedings of the Coinage of the Americas Conference ; no. 10
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, 1992
PAPER MONEY
Index: Uil, Hubrecht 1953-
Title: Noodgeld uit Dreischor en Noordgouwe / [H. Uil]
Source: Mededelingenblad van Stad en Lande van Schouwen-Duiveland 57 (1987) (januari) p. 281-283
TRADITIONAL MONEY
Index: Hogendorn, Jan S. 1937-
Title: The shell money of the slave trade / Jan Hogendorn and Marion Johnson
Published: Cambridge [etc.] : Cambridge University Press, 2003
Abstract: This study examines the role of cowrie-shell money in West African trade, particularly the slave trade. The shells were carried from the Maldives to the Mediterranean by Arab traders for further transport across the Sahara, and to Europe by competing Portuguese, Dutch, English and French traders for onward transport to the West African coast. In Africa they served to purchase the slaves exported to the New World, as well as other less sinister exports. Over a large part of West Africa they became the regular market currency, but were severely devalued by the importation of thousands of tons of the cheaper Zanzibar cowries. Colonial governments disliked cowries because of the inflation and encouraged their replacement by low-value coins. TheĪ… disappeared almost totallĪ, to re-appear during the depression of the 1930s, and have been found occasionally in the markets of remote frontier districts, avoiding exchange and currency control problems.
Index: Krmnicek, Stefan
Title: More than money : Begleitheft zur Ausstellung am Institut für Klassische Archäologie der Universität Tübingen, Schloss Hohentübingen, 17. Oktober bis 13. Dezember 2013 / zsgest. von Stefan Krmnicek ; mit Beitr. von Luisa Balandat, Isabel Köhr und Dirk Seidensticker
Published: Tübingen : Institut für Klassische Archäologie, 2013
MEDALS
Index: Gozalbes Fernández de Palencia, Manuel
Title: Las medallas de Juan Vilanova y Piera / Manuel Gozalbes Fernández de Palencia
Source: XIV Congreso Nacional de Numismática : ars metallica, monedas y medallas : Nules-Valencia, 25-27 de octubre de 2010 / ed. por Julio Torres. - Madrid : [s.n.], 2011. - P. 367-389
Summary: The collection of the Museu de Prehistoria de Valencia contains the Masia-Vilanova bequest, dating back to 1985 and 1996 and comprised of books, documents and 25 medals which belonged to Juan Vilanova y Piera (1821-1893), the geologist and paleontologist who introduced prehistoric studies in Spain. The set of medals includes commemorative and honorary pieces which help us gain a deep understanding of the academic and social environment in which this distinguished researcher lived in the second half of the nineteenth century.
Index: Meijer, Joeri
Title: Academia Regia Disciplinarum Nederlandica in Nummis : catalogus van de penningcollectie van het Trippenhuis / Joeri Meijer, Erik Müller
Published: Amsterdam : Koninklijke Nederlandse Academie van Wetenschappen, 2015
Index: Pietersen, Frank A.M.
Title: De Domtoren op penningen / [F.A.M. Pietersen]
Source: Oud-Utrecht 55 (1982) 6 (juni) p. 148-154
Index: Stahl, Alan Michael 1947-
Title: The medal in America. [Vol. 1]: Coinage of the Americas conference at The American numismatic society, New-York, September 26-27 1987 / ed. by Alan M. Stahl
Series: Proceedings of the Coinage of the Americas Conference ; no. 4
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, cop. 1988
Index: Stahl, Alan Michael 1947-
Title: The medal in America. Vol. 2: Coinage of the Americas Conference at the American Numismatic Society, New York, November 8-9, 1997 / ed. by Alan M. Stahl
Series: Proceedings of the Coinage of the Americas Conference ; no. 13
Published: New York : American Numismatic Society, cop. 1999
Index: Torres, Julio Lázaro
Title: Auge y caída de la acuñación a volante. Su reflejo en la medalla española / Julio Torres
Source: XIV Congreso Nacional de Numismática : ars metallica, monedas y medallas : Nules-Valencia, 25-27 de octubre de 2010 / ed. por Julio Torres. - Madrid : [s.n.], 2011. - P. 323-348
Abstract: Taking place within a period of thirty to forty years in the early 19th century but with a speed more in keeping with the 21st, the greatest enhancements were made to the screw presses that had been used in the manufacture of coinage since the beginning of the 17th century. These screw presses, mostly for practical reasons, would be permanently replaced during the course of the century by new presses based on different mechanical principles. That process of development, facilitated by the Swiss Jean-Pierre Droz and the Frenchman Philippe Gengembre, has been immortalized on four Spanish medals or medal types. Some of these are kept in the Casa de la Moneda Museum, and they are the ones that we present in this paper. The third key personage in this import of technology was Mariano Gonzalez de Sepulveda, the Spanish engraver who learnt the method from the former of the afore-mentioned during the first few years of the century. He strove to complete the purchase of a series of tools that he considered essential for the advancement of his art in Spain. Years later he would be the one who would introduce Gengembre’s method.
Index: Weyde, Albertus Jacobus van der
Title: Nederlandsche penningen, uitgereikt in verband met het inenten tegen pokken / door A.J. van der Weyde
Source: Nederlandsch Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde 73 (1929) 44 (2 november) p. 5149-5155
Index: Weyde, Albertus Jacobus van der
Title: Nog een vaccinatie-penning / door A.J. van der Weyde
Source: Nederlandsch Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde 74 (1930) 1 (4 januari) p. 61
Index: Zwierzina, Willem Karel Frederik 1880-1942
Title: De penningen betrekking hebbende op Leiden geslagen vóór 1813. [1] / [W.K.F.
Zwierzina]
Source: Leidsch Jaarboekje 9 (1912) p. 94-121
Index: Zwierzina, Willem Karel Frederik 1880-1942
Title: De penningen betrekking hebbende op Leiden geslagen vóór 1813. [2] / [W.K.F. Zwierzina]
Source: Leidsch Jaarboekje 10 (1913) p. 63-93