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Carson, R. A G. and Kraay, C. M., eds. (1978).
Scripta nummaria romana: essays presented to Humphrey Sutherland
.
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Scripta nummaria romana: essays presented to Humphrey Sutherland
Publication Type
The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book
Publication Type:
Monograph Chapter
Editor
The editor of the publication or report
Editor:
Robert A G Carson
Colin M Kraay
Year of Publication
The year the book, article or report was published
Year of Publication:
1978
Note
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Note:
Date Of Issue From: 1978
Source
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Source:
BIAB (British Archaeological Abstracts (BAA))
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
05 Dec 2008
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Chapter Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
Plus ça change: currency in Central Gaul from Julius Caesar to Nero
Daphne Nash
12 - 31
The use of currency in Gaul in the century after the Roman conquest is seen as a development of earlier Celtic practice. Coinages had been issued by central civitas authorities and by larger town administrations; bronze coinages of native type issued late in 1st century BC and local imitations of Julio-Claudian asses are regarded as the successors of pre-conquest town coinages. Halving and quartering of Augustan bronze coins is seen as a response by the Roman army to its intrusion into a coin-using population accustomed to the use of small denominations. Au/Numis Lit
Denarii and quinarii, AD 253-95
C E King
75 - 104
Argues that in the fluid context of the later 3rd century denarii and quinarii stood in a definite denominational relationship with the antoninianus, and that issues were too small and sporadic for them to have been intended to function as small change. Au/Numis Lit (abr)
Bronze coinage in Roman Britain and the western provinces, AD 330-402
Richard Reece
124 - 142
Coins with legible mint-marks found in Britain have been collected together to examine the variation in supply by mint of origin and by numbers supplied per year. The results are compared with the coins published from Conimbriga (Portugal) and Carnuntum (Austria). Au/Numis Lit
Anglo-Saxon gold coins
Ian Stewart
142 - 172
Discusses work done in the thirty years since publication of the Crondall hoard, with list of additions to the corpus and full bibliography. In the light of all available analyses of fineness, and of recent revisions of the dating of Merovingian coinage, a new chronological framework is proposed for the 7th century material. In consequence the first English tremisses, with Victory reverses, may belong c 600 or earlier. Au/Numis Lit(abr)
The circulation of Roman coins in North Britain: the evidence of hoards and site-finds from Scotland
Anne S Robertson
186 - 216
Fewer than fifty hoards of Roman coins have been recorded from Scotland, their chronological distribution is excessively thin except for four specific periods. The hoards of these periods and the site-finds of denarii from Scotland probably indicate military sources. The few sporadic hoards of late 3rd and 4th must have been acquired from elsewhere after the Severan withdrawal from Scotland. Au/Numis Lit (abr)