The use of coins as pendants is a common practice in the Scandinavian Viking Age (c. AD 800–1140). About three per cent of the coins circulating in Scandinavia show signs of having been adapted for suspension, either with a small hole or a loop. Modifying coins in this way changes the nature of the object. The pierced and looped coins move from having an economic function to having a display and symbolic function, at least temporarily. After being long neglected by both archaeologists and numismatists, the reuse of coins as pendants has started to receive attention in recent years. This arises mainly from a desire to approach coins from perspectives other than purely economic ones. Coins, like any other archaeological object, are part of m...
Fish-head pendants are one of the characteristic Gotlandic Late Iron Age artefacts. This object has ...
Archaeological excavations in Scandinavian countries have uncovered hundreds of thousands of coins f...
Silver jewellery from Rådved On top of the coins in ...
The use of coins as pendants is a common practice in the Scandinavian Viking Age (c. AD 800–1140). A...
The kings of Norway issued coins on a regular basis starting in the mid-11th century, and probably c...
The archaeological study of coins has many applications for the study of the Viking Age in Iceland. ...
Silver coin hoarding is a distinct feature of the Viking Age in some northern European areas, and th...
The inflow of Islamic dirhams into the Baltic Sea zone in the 9th and 10th century has often been de...
A SOCIAL APPROACH TO MONETISATION shifts the attention from the classic money media — gold and silve...
Very few studies devoted to coin pendants simultaneously take into account their numismatic, technic...
This paper investigates the materiality and symbolic significance of a recently emerging group of Vi...
Concepts pertaining to the supernatural, magic and religious rites, time and again determined certai...
Coins and coin finds can be used to initiate interdisciplinary dialogues especially between numismat...
This second volume concerning the excavations in the Viking-period town Kaupang in 1998–2003 examine...
Haithabu and the Danish monarchy in the 10th centuryNumismatic evidenceIn the 10th century, Haithabu...
Fish-head pendants are one of the characteristic Gotlandic Late Iron Age artefacts. This object has ...
Archaeological excavations in Scandinavian countries have uncovered hundreds of thousands of coins f...
Silver jewellery from Rådved On top of the coins in ...
The use of coins as pendants is a common practice in the Scandinavian Viking Age (c. AD 800–1140). A...
The kings of Norway issued coins on a regular basis starting in the mid-11th century, and probably c...
The archaeological study of coins has many applications for the study of the Viking Age in Iceland. ...
Silver coin hoarding is a distinct feature of the Viking Age in some northern European areas, and th...
The inflow of Islamic dirhams into the Baltic Sea zone in the 9th and 10th century has often been de...
A SOCIAL APPROACH TO MONETISATION shifts the attention from the classic money media — gold and silve...
Very few studies devoted to coin pendants simultaneously take into account their numismatic, technic...
This paper investigates the materiality and symbolic significance of a recently emerging group of Vi...
Concepts pertaining to the supernatural, magic and religious rites, time and again determined certai...
Coins and coin finds can be used to initiate interdisciplinary dialogues especially between numismat...
This second volume concerning the excavations in the Viking-period town Kaupang in 1998–2003 examine...
Haithabu and the Danish monarchy in the 10th centuryNumismatic evidenceIn the 10th century, Haithabu...
Fish-head pendants are one of the characteristic Gotlandic Late Iron Age artefacts. This object has ...
Archaeological excavations in Scandinavian countries have uncovered hundreds of thousands of coins f...
Silver jewellery from Rådved On top of the coins in ...