Coin Hoards X: Greek Hoards

Coin Hoards X: Greek Hoards
The tenth volume of Coin Hoards is again focused on ancient Greek coinage. The inventory contains records of 471 new hoards or re-evaluations of old ones, and provides an indispensable supplement to the Inventory of Greek Coin Hoards and previous volumes of Coin Hoards. Ten articles are devoted to the full publication of a series of important new hoards related to the coinage of the Seleucid Empire, and are accompanied by 67 illustrative plates. These studies constitute a major advance in our understanding of the coinage and economy of this period, both within the Seleucid Empire and in the neighboring Greek world.

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

From Coins to History: Selected Numismatic Studies

From Coins to History: Selected Numismatic Studies

Harold B. Mattingly has always helped direct numismatic and epigraphical studies, and his work has often sought and defended unorthodox positions in the fields of numismatics and epigraphy. Here is a collection of his numismatic papers, with short introductions written by the author, revisiting his arguments. Gathered into an easily accessible volume, this collection of essays ranges over the field of Greek and Roman coinage, presenting a series of papers that helped change our interpretations of numismatic evidence. Because many of these papers are hard to find, collecting them in one volume will be of particular use to libraries, graduate students, and scholars.

Harold B. Mattingly is a retired Professor of Ancient History at Leeds University, and current president of the Royal Numismatic Society.

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

Roman Coins and Public Life under the Empire: E. Togo Salmon Papers II (Roman Theater & Society)

Roman Coins and Public Life under the Empire: E. Togo Salmon Papers II (Roman Theater & Society)

Roman coins often shed light on Roman public life and society through the legends, portraits, and images they bear. The papers collected in this volume were originally presented at the Second E. Togo Salmon Conference on Roman Studies. The eight contributors are specialists in Roman coins or Roman history and in the relations between them.

Coins are a unique source of information about the Roman world. In the case of the Roman Empire they were issued by or with the approval of the ruling power. The representations and legends they show therefore present an official view of contemporary affairs. The coins themselves, minted for official purposes such as paying the army, when studied carefully can help reconstruct official policies. They can also occasionally reveal what monuments now lost may have looked like.

It is not infrequent to come across pleas that the ancient historian should make more frequent use of numismatic evidence. These essays make clear that efforts are being made both by numismatists and by historians to bring the two disciplines together. At the same time the papers reveal that the task is by no means a straightforward one. The survival of Roman coins is variable, and so attempts to reconstruct the size and distribution of issues calls for skilled and experienced analysis. This collection of papers provides evidence for the kind of deductions that the historian may make from Roman coins as well as the illustrations of the pitfalls that await the unwary.

Those interested in Roman history, amateur coin collectors, and professional numismatists will all find much here to widen their knowledge of the public context of Roman coins.

George Paul is Professor of Classics, McMaster University. Michael Ierardi is Lecturer in Classics, McMaster University.

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

Coinage and Identity in the Roman Provinces

Coinage and Identity in the Roman Provinces
Coins were the most deliberate of all symbols of public communal identities, yet the Roman historian will look in vain for any good introduction to, or systematic treatment of, the subject. Sixteen leading international scholars have sought to address this need by producing this authoritative collection of essays, which ranges over the whole Roman world from Britain to Egypt, from 200 BC to AD 300. The subject is approached through surveys of the broad geographical and chronological structure of the evidence, through chapters which focus on ways of expressing identity, and through regional studies which place the numismatic evidence in local context.

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

Imperial Ideals in the Roman West: Representation, Circulation, Power

Imperial Ideals in the Roman West: Representation, Circulation, Power
This book examines the figure of the Roman emperor as a unifying symbol for the western empire. It documents an extensive correspondence between the ideals cited in honorific inscriptions for the emperor erected across the western empire and those advertised on imperial coins minted at Rome. This reveals that the dissemination of specific imperial ideals was more pervasive than previously thought, and indicates a high degree of ideological unification amongst the aristocracies of the western provinces. The widespread circulation of a particular set of imperial ideals, and the particular form of ideological unification that this brought about, not only reinforced the power of the Roman imperial state, but also increased the authority of local aristocrats, thereby facilitating a general convergence of social power that defined the high roman empire.

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

Historical References On Coins of the Roman Empire From Augustus to Gallienus: -1917

Historical References On Coins of the Roman Empire From Augustus to Gallienus: -1917
Originally published in 1917. This volume from the Cornell University Library’s print collections was scanned on an APT BookScan and converted to JPG 2000 format by Kirtas Technologies. All titles scanned cover to cover and pages may include marks notations and other marginalia present in the original volume.

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

A Handbook of Greek and Roman Coins (1899)

A Handbook of Greek and Roman Coins  (1899)
Originally published in 1899. This volume from the Cornell University Library’s print collections was scanned on an APT BookScan and converted to JPG 2000 format by Kirtas Technologies. All titles scanned cover to cover and pages may include marks notations and other marginalia present in the original volume.

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

Historical Roman Coins: From the Earliest Times to the Reign of Augustus (1909)

Historical Roman Coins: From the Earliest Times to the Reign of Augustus (1909)
Originally published in 1909. This volume from the Cornell University Library’s print collections was scanned on an APT BookScan and converted to JPG 2000 format by Kirtas Technologies. All titles scanned cover to cover and pages may include marks notations and other marginalia present in the original volume.

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

Catalogue of the Greek and Roman Coins in the Numismatic Collecton of Yale College

Catalogue of the Greek and Roman Coins in the Numismatic Collecton of Yale College

CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>

The Roman Coins of Alexandria (Quantitative Studies)

The Roman Coins of Alexandria (Quantitative Studies)
Quantitative studies of the Alexandrian coinage of Nero, Trajan and Septimius Severus which aim to map the yearly fluctuations of the minting in as absolute figures as possible; and then to find the political and economic reasons that lay behind them. Far more data A from other regions A has been collected and awaits treatment in the same way, if the system adopted here finds acceptance.
CHECK PRICE NOW!
Read Full Review >>