Why did the ancient Greek polis originally need coins? This question, so simple to pose and so difficult to answer, leads to more specific queries such as what practical purposes coins served in the polis and what messages they communicated either explicitly through their types and legends or implicitly by their very creation as products of the political community of the polis
<p>In this paper I suggest that there was a paradigm shift in Greek coinage in the second century BC...
The provincial coinage of the Roman Empire has proven to be a rich source for studying civic experie...
Coinage materialised Empire under Rome in many ways. The topic is approached here under four heading...
The spread of coins, which occurred throughout the archaic and classical periods of Greece, was a fo...
This book examines the common assumption that coins were produced in classical Greece to serve as sy...
The introduction of coinage marks an important innovation in the history of money and a transition i...
Though it is generally believed that the first coins of ancient Athens, the Wappenmünzen (“heraldic ...
Coinage, the practice of minting small bits of metal with distinctive marks, appearing in the second...
Although an important marker of collective identity, coinage is often absent from current research o...
The understanding of Thracian coinages has been disrupted by a political approach systematically com...
Ph.D.Ancient historySocial SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Stud...
The use of minted coins was one of the major innovations in the ancient world of the first millenniu...
Numismatic evidence is an incredibly useful primary source for the study of history and can convey a...
Two fragmentary specimens of Greek epigraphy, both inscribed within a century of one another (ca. 45...
The Roman monetary system initially relie don bronze bullion (aes rude) but in the late fourth centu...
<p>In this paper I suggest that there was a paradigm shift in Greek coinage in the second century BC...
The provincial coinage of the Roman Empire has proven to be a rich source for studying civic experie...
Coinage materialised Empire under Rome in many ways. The topic is approached here under four heading...
The spread of coins, which occurred throughout the archaic and classical periods of Greece, was a fo...
This book examines the common assumption that coins were produced in classical Greece to serve as sy...
The introduction of coinage marks an important innovation in the history of money and a transition i...
Though it is generally believed that the first coins of ancient Athens, the Wappenmünzen (“heraldic ...
Coinage, the practice of minting small bits of metal with distinctive marks, appearing in the second...
Although an important marker of collective identity, coinage is often absent from current research o...
The understanding of Thracian coinages has been disrupted by a political approach systematically com...
Ph.D.Ancient historySocial SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Stud...
The use of minted coins was one of the major innovations in the ancient world of the first millenniu...
Numismatic evidence is an incredibly useful primary source for the study of history and can convey a...
Two fragmentary specimens of Greek epigraphy, both inscribed within a century of one another (ca. 45...
The Roman monetary system initially relie don bronze bullion (aes rude) but in the late fourth centu...
<p>In this paper I suggest that there was a paradigm shift in Greek coinage in the second century BC...
The provincial coinage of the Roman Empire has proven to be a rich source for studying civic experie...
Coinage materialised Empire under Rome in many ways. The topic is approached here under four heading...