Estimated price: 6.000 €Weimarer Republik, 5 Reichsmark 1930 G, Polierte PlatteLeipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1082578
Estimated price: 40.000 €10 Dukaten 1628, Johann Georg I., von allergrößter Seltenheit,
einzig im Handel bekanntes Exemplar
Leipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1083488
Estimated price: 5.000 €Danzig, 25 Gulden 1923Leipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1082637
Estimated price: 4.500 €Wilhelm II., 3 Mark 1916, F, Polierte PlatteLeipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1082481
Estimated price: 5.000 €Friedrich August I., der Starke, 2/3 Taler 1708, erstes im Handel
bekannte Exemplar
Leipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1083798
Estimated price: 4.000 €Friedrich August I, 1/2 Taler, 1700, äußerst seltenes und
prachtvolles Exemplar mit feiner Patina
Leipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1083771
Estimated price: 2.200 €Friedrich August II., Breiter Taler, 1753, prägefrischLeipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1083910
Estimated price: 2.000 €Friedrich August II., Dukat, 1756, Vorzüglich/ fast StempelglanzLeipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1083926
Estimated price: 3.500 €Günther XLI. Allein, Taler, 1571, äußerst seltenes und
attraktives Exemplar
Leipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1082016
Estimated price: 8.550 €Ernst August, Löser zu 1 1/4 Talern, 1680Leipziger Münzhandlung Auction 107 & 1081653
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Using Coins as Sources: The Roman Provinces, 300 BCE–300 CE

The series “Guides to the Coinage of the Ancient World” has a new volume. Andrew Burnett has published his work on Roman Provincial coins, highlighting the unique insights these coins provide into the Roman world.

Content

Andrew Burnett, Using Coins as Sources: The Roman Provinces, 300 BCE–300 CE (Series: Guides to the Coinage of the Ancient World). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2024. 406 p. 226 colour illus. 16 maps. Paperback, 216 x 140 x 21 mm. ISBN: 9781009420105. Price: £29.99 / $39.99.

Andrew Burnett, Using Coins as Sources: The Roman Provinces, 300 BCE–300 CE (Series: Guides to the Coinage of the Ancient World). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2024. 406 p. 226 colour illus. 16 maps. Paperback, 216 x 140 x 21 mm. ISBN: 9781009420105. Price: £29.99 / $39.99.

About the Book

Provincial coinage gives us a unique insight into the Roman world, reflecting the values and concerns of the elites of the many hundreds of cities in the Roman empire. Coins offer a very different perspective from written history, which usually represents the views of the senatorial class, and which was usually composed long after the events that are described.

The coins, in contrast, provide evidence without hindsight, and uniquely allow a systematic examination across the whole Roman world. This volume makes it possible for instructors and students and scholars to deploy a complex set of material evidence on many historical topics. It includes over two hundred illustrations of coins with detailed captions, so providing a convenient sourcebook of the most important items, and covers topics such as the motivation for Roman conquest, the revolution of Augustus, the world of the Second Sophistic and the crisis of the third century.

Table of Contents

  • Precious metal coinages at Rome and in the provinces
  • The beginnings of an empire in Italy and the western Mediterranean (300–200 BCE)
  • The growth of an empire during the late Republic (200–31 BCE)
  • Whose coins? A model for city coinage in imperial times
  • The revolution of Augustus – and becoming more Roman in the first century CE
  • Reinforcing Greek identity in the Golden Age of the second century CE
  • ‘From a kingdom of gold to one of iron and rust’ in the third century CE

Discount

When you buy the book on www.cambridge.org, enter the code BURNETT25 at checkout for a 20% discount (until January 31, 2025).

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