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Articoli di riviste sul tema "Italian Numismatics"

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Crisà, Antonino. "Farmers, the Police Force, and the Authorities: The “Calvatone (1911) Hoard” as Seen Through Archival Records (Cremona – Italy)". Notae Numismaticae - TOM XV, n. 15 (17 maggio 2021): 107–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.52800/ajst.1.a.07.

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This paper presents a new set of archival records from Rome on the discovery of a Roman Republican denarii hoard, found by the brothers Birsilio and Luigi Simonazzi on their lands at Calvatone (Cremona, Italy, 1911). Local police forces seized the hoard and alerted the Coin Cabinet of Brera in Milan, where the numismatist Serafino Ricci (1867–1943) evaluated and finally acquired selected coins to increase the museum collections. The “Calvatone (1911) hoard” is an essential case study in the history of Italian numismatic collections, museum studies, and archaeology. These records are particularly worth studying for two main reasons. They show how local and regional authorities dealt with casual archaeological discoveries in northern Italy during the post-Unification period (1861–1918). They also help us to better understand how the Italian government acted to safeguard antiquities according to contemporary law, and how the state collections could be increased by judicial seizures and fresh acquisitions.
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EMANOV, Alexander G. "KAFA’S MONEY-CHANGING HOLE IN THE 13TH — 14TH CENTURIES". Tyumen State University Herald. Humanities Research. Humanitates 8, n. 1 (2022): 179–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.21684/2411-197x-2022-8-1-179-205.

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This Article addresses Origin of the Money-Changing Hole in Kafa in the 13th — 14th Centuries based on a wide Variety of Sources, public-legal Documents, notarial Deeds, public financial Registers, private financial Records, Trade Books, numismatic and archaeological Collections. In the Article reconstructed Activity of the Greek Trapeza and Trapezites, who specialized in the Exchange of Coins with Greek Writing, of the Levant Sarraf Yanseke and Sarrafs, in Charge of which has been Oriental Money Exchange, of the Italian Campsa and Campsors, who were responsible for Occident Coins. The Money-Changing Hole in Kafa was doing since the End of the 13th Century not only Exchange Money, but also Credit of the commercial Matters, torn into early Banks. One of the first Bankers in Kafa was Manfred, whose Name was not Italian, but German Origins, which meant “Man of World”, which reflected the cosmopolitan Character of the City.
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Gozalbes-Cravioto, Enrique, e Helena Gozalbes García. "Hallazgos de monedas greco-massaliotas en la provincia de Cuenca (España)". Vínculos de Historia Revista del Departamento de Historia de la Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, n. 11 (22 giugno 2022): 280–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.18239/vdh_2022.11.12.

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Publicamos una pequeña serie de monedas, relacionadas con las piezas conocidas inicialmente como de ejemplares “tipo Auriol”. Se trata de varias imitaciones greco-massaliotas, relacionadas con el ciclo numismático griego del Occidente mediterráneo. La importante novedad de las mismas se fundamenta en el lugar de hallazgo, pues este se ha producido en una zona interior de la Península Ibérica, donde hasta el momento no se había documentado el descubrimiento de numismas de este tipo. Palabras clave: moneda, imitaciones, edetanosTopónimos: Massalia, Emporion, AuriolPeriodo: Edetanos ABSTRACTThe text presents a small series of coins, similar to those initially known as "Auriol type". These are various Greek-Massalian imitations, related to the Greek numismatic cycle of the Western Mediterranean. What makes these coins particularly interesting is their place of discovery, since they were found in an inland area of the Iberian Peninsula, where the appearance of specimens of this type had not previously been documented. Keywords: coin, imitations, AuriolPlace names: Massalia, Emporion,Period: edetans REFERENCIASAmorós, J. V. (1934), Les monedes emporitanes anteriors a les dracmes, Barcelona, Gabinet Numismàtic de Catalunya.Arévalo González, A. (2002), “La moneda griega foránea en la Península Ibérica”, en Actas del X Congreso Nacional de Numismática, Madrid, Museo Casa de la Moneda, pp. 1-15.Babelon, E. C. F. (1901), Traité des monnaies grecques et romaine, vol. 1, Paris, Ernest Leroux Editeur.Benezet, J., Delhoeste, J. Lentillon, J.-P. (2003), “Une monnaie du “type d´Auriol” dans la plaine roussillonnaise”, Cahiers Numismatiques, 158, pp. 5-8.Blancard, M. (1870-1871), “Iconographie des monnaies du trésor d´Auriol acquises par le cabinet des médailles de Marseille”, en Mémoires del´Académie des Sciences, Belles-Lettre et Arts de Maseille, Marseille, Barlatier-Feissat Pére et fils, pp. 17-33.Blanchet, A. (1905), Traité des monnaies gauloises, vol. 1, Paris, Ernest Leroux Editeur.Campo Díaz, M. (1987), “Circulación de monedas massaliotas en la Península Ibérica (s. V-IV a. C.)”, en Mélanges offerts au docteur J. B. Colbert de Beaulieu, Paris, Leópard d`or, pp. 175-187.— (1997), “La moneda griega y su influencia en el contexto indígena”, en Historia monetaria de Hispania antigua, Madrid, Jesús Vico, pp. 19-49.— (2002), “Las emisiones de Emporion y su difusión en el entorno ibérico”, La monetazione dei Focei in Occidente, Atti dell´XI Convegno del Centro Internazionale di studi Numismatici, Roma, Istituto italiano di Numismatica, pp. 139-165.— (2003), “Les primeres imatges gregues: l´inici de les fraccionàries d´Emporion”, en VII Curs d´Història Monetaria d´Hispània. Les imatges monètaries: llenguatge i significat, Barcelona, Museu Nacional d´Art de Catalunya, pp. 25-45. Campo Díaz, M. y Sanmartí, E. (1994), “Nuevos datos para ña cronología de las monedas fraccionarias de Emporion: revisión del tesoro Neapolis-1926”, Huelva Arqueológica, 13, pp. 153-172.Chevillon, J. A. (2002), “Les monnaies archaïques d´Emporion dans le trésor d´Auriol”, Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique, 57, pp. 30-33.Chevillon, J. A., Bertaud, O. y Guernier, R. (2008), “Nouvelles données relatives au monnayage archaïque massaliète”, Revue Numismatique, 164, pp. 209-244.Chevillon, J. A. Ripollès, P. P. (2014), “The Greeck Far West: un exceptional adaptation of a design from Asia Menor with bull und lion foreparts”, Journal of the Numismatic Association of Australia, 25, pp. 44-46.Chevillon, J. A., Ripollès, P. P. y López, C. (2013), “Les têtes de taureau dans le mnnayage postarchaïque empuritain du V siècle av. J. C.”, OMNI. Revue Numismatique, 6, pp. 10-14. De Saucy, F., De Berthélemy, A. y Hucher, E. (1875), “Examen détaillée du trésor d´Auriol (Bouches-du-Rhone)”, en Mélanges de Numismatique 1, Paris, Le Mans, pp. 12-44.Furtwängler, A. E. (1971), “Remarques sur les plus anciennes monnaies frapées en Espagne”, Schweizer Münzblätter, 81, pp. 13-21.— (1978), Monnaies grecques en Gaule. Le trésor d´Auriol et le monnayage de Massalia 525/520-460 av. J. C., Fribourg.— (2002), “Monnaies grecques en Gaule: nouvelles trouvalles (6ème-5 ème s. av. J.-C.)”, en La monetazione dei Focei in Occidente. Atti dell`XI Convegno del Centro Internazionale di Studi Numismatici, Rome, Istituto italiano di Numismatica, pp. 93-11.García-Bellido, M. P. (1993), Las cecas libio-fenicias, Ibiza, Museu Arqueologic d´Eivissa e Formentera.— (1998), “La moneda griega de Iberia”, en Los griegos en España, Madrid, Ministerio de Cultura, pp. 158-178. — (2017), “Las copias de la moneda Tipo Auriol en el Golfo de León: foceos y nativos”, Gaceta Numismática, 194, pp. 3-14.Gozalbes Cravioto, E. (2014), “La economía monetaria en la provincia de Cuenca en la antigüedad”, E. Gozalbes Cravioto, J. A. Hernández Rubio y J. A. Almonacid Clavería (coords.), Cuenca: historia en sus monedas, Cuenca, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, pp. 55-84.— (2017a), “La ceca de Ikalesken y el problema de su localización”, Gaceta Numismática, 193, pp. 3-19.— (2017b), “Una pieza de Urkesken y la localización de la ceca”, Gaceta Numismática, 193, pp. 21-30.Gozalbes Fernández de Palencia, M. y Ripollès, P. P. (2002), “Nuevos hallazgos de monedas foráneas en el territorio de Arse-Saguntum”, en P. P. Ripollès y M. M. Llorens, Arse-Saguntum. Historia monetaria de la ciudad y su territorio, Sagunto, Fundación Bancaja, pp. 528-533.Gozalbes García, H. y Gozalbes Cravioto, E. (2017), “Une obole massaliote datant du Ve siècle av. J. C. sur le territoire de Cuenca (Espagne)”, Bulletin de la Société Française de Numismatique, 72.2, pp. 52-56.Guadán, A. M. (1968), Las monedas de plata de Emporion y Rhode vol. I, Barcelona, Ayuntamiento de Barcelona.— (1970), Las monedas de plata de Emporion y Rhode, vol. II, Barcelona, Ayuntamiento de Barcelona.Lambert, E. (1864), Essai sur la numismatique gauloise du Nord-Ouest de la France, Paris, Derache.Maurel, G. (2013), Corpus des monnaies de Marseille et Provence, Languedoc oriental et vallée du Rhone (520-20 av. notre ère), Montpellier, Omni, 2013.Omos, R. (1995), “Usos de la moneda en la Hispania prerromana y problemas de lectura iconográfica”, en M. P. García-Bellido y R. M. Centeno (eds.), La moneda hispánica. Ciudad y territorio, Madrid, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, pp. 41-52.Planas Palau, A. y Martí Mañanes, A. (1991), Las monedas de otras cecas encontradas en Ibiza, Ibiza, Puig Castellar. Ripollès, P. P. (1982), La circulación monetaria en la Tarraconense mediterránea, Valencia, Federico Domenech. — (1985), “Las monedas del tesoro de Morella, conservadas en la B. N de París”, Acta Numismàtica, 19, (1985), pp. 47-64.— (1989), “Fracciones ampuritanas. Estado de la investigación”, Archivo de Prehistoria Levantina, 19,pp. 303-317.— (2005), “Las acuñaciones antiguas de la península Ibérica: dependencias e innovaciones”, en C. Alfaro, C. Marcos y P. Otero (coords.), Actas del XIII Congreso Internacional de Numismática, vol. 1, Madrid, Ministerio de Cultura, pp. 187-208.— (2011), “Cuando la plata se convierte en moneda: Iberia oriental”, en Barter, Money and Coinage in the Ancienr Mediterranean (10th-1st Centuries B.C.). Actas del IV Encuentro Peninsular de Numismátic Antigua, Madrid, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, pp. 213-226.— (2013), “Ancient Iberian Coinage”, Documentos Digitales de Arqueología, 2, pp. 1-55.— (2015), “Los divisores ampuritanos con cabeza de carnero y puntos en el campo”, OMNI. Revue Numismatique, 9, pp. 13-16.Ripollès, P. P. Chevillon, J. A. (2013), “The Archaic coinage of Emporion”, The Numismatic Chronicle, 173, pp. 1-21.Ripollès, P. P. y Llorens, M. M. (2002), Arse-Saguntum. Historia monetaria de la ciudad y su territorio, Sagunto, Fundación Bancaja.Rodríguez Casanova, I. (2014), “El tesoro de Valeria: nuevas aportaciones sesenta años después”, en E. Gozalbes, J. A. Hernández Rubio y J. A. Almonacid (coords.), Cuenca: la Historia en sus monedas, Cuenca, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, pp. 85-106.Savès, G. (1976), Les monnaies gauloises à la croix, Toulouse, Privat, 1976.Villaronga, L. (1987), “Les oboles massaliotes à la roue et leurs imitations dans la Péninsule Ibérique”, en Mélanges offerts au docteur J. B. Colbert de Beaulieu, Paris, Leópard d`or, 1987, pp. 769-777.— (1995), “L´emissió emporitana amb cap de be i revers de creu puntejada de la segona meitat del segle V a.C.”, Acta Numismática, 25, (1995), pp. 17-33.— (1997), Monedes de plata emporitanes dels secles V-VI a. C., Barcelona, Leandre, 1997.— (2003), “La troballa de l´Emporà”, Acta Numismàtica, 33, pp. 15-46.Villaronga, L. Benages, J. (2011), Ancient Coinage of the Iberian Peninsula. Greek, Punic, Iberian, Roman, Barcelona, Societat Catalana d´Estudis Numismàtics, 2011 (citado como ACIP).
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ROOS, ANNA MARIE. "Taking Newton on tour: the scientific travels of Martin Folkes, 1733–1735". British Journal for the History of Science 50, n. 4 (5 ottobre 2017): 569–601. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007087417000802.

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AbstractMartin Folkes (1690–1754) was Newton's protégé, an English antiquary, mathematician, numismatist and astronomer who would in the latter part of his career become simultaneously president of the Royal Society and of the Society of Antiquaries. Folkes took a Grand Tour from March 1733 to September 1735, recording the Italian leg of his journey from Padua to Rome in his journal. This paper examines Folkes's travel diary to analyse his Freemasonry, his intellectual development as a Newtonian and his scientific peregrination. It shows how, in this latter area, how he used metrology to understand not only the aesthetics but also the engineering principles of antique buildings and artefacts, as well as their context and place in the Italian landscape. Using Folkes's diary, his account book of his journey in the Norwich archives, and his correspondence with other natural philosophers such as Francesco Algarotti (1712–1764), Anders Celsius (1701–1744) and Abbé Antonio Schinella Conti (1667–1749), this paper will also demonstrate to what extent Folkes's journey established his reputation as an international broker of Newtonianism, as well as the overall primacy of English scientific instrumentation to Italian virtuosi.
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Kopij, Kamil. "Mints Locations and Chronology of Gnaeus and Sextus Pompey’s Bronze Coinage (RRC 471, 478 and 479): A Die Axes Study". Notae Numismaticae - TOM XV, n. 15 (17 maggio 2021): 65–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.52800/ajst.1.a.05.

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The coinage of Pompey the Great’s sons has long attracted the attention of numismatists and historians trying to reconstruct a detailed chronology of their activities. One of the problems examined was the location of the places they minted coins. This article tries to indicate the possible locations of mints producing Gnaeus’ and Sextus’ bronze coinage (RRC 471, RRC 478, RRC 479) based on the analysis of the die axes of 794 coins and attempts to interpret the results based on local traditions regarding this aspect of coin morphology. The results show that RRC 471 was most likely minted in Corduba. The unusual die alignment of the RRC 478 indicates that it may have been minted not in Spain or Sicily, but in Achaia or Bithynia. It is, however, difficult to reconcile this with the geographical distribution of the finds that points to Sicily. Nonetheless we should probably move dating of this type until after the signing of the Treaty of Misenum in 39 BC. The die axes of the RRC 479 is consistent with traditions of most Sicilian mints. The exception to this is one of the series whose different rotation pattern indicates production in one of only two Sicilian mints (Panormos or Centuripae) or one of the several South Italian cities (most probably Rhegion).
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Voukelatos, John. "Provenance Lost and Found: Alfred Bourguignon". KOINON: The International Journal of Classical Numismatic Studies 1 (1 gennaio 2018): 30–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/k.v1i.1156.

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On the 22nd October 2017 the Swiss numismatic firm Nomos offered at auction a silver didrachm minted by the Campanian city of Nola. Unbeknownst to the auction house this coin was once in the collection of Alfred Bourguignon. Although little is known about this 19th century collector, he is recorded by the Almanach de Gotha as being the deputy of the Netherlands Consulate in Naples. He was also a partner in the prominent 19th century Neapolitan bank, Banca Meuricoffre, founded by Achilles Meuricoffre and continued by his two sons Oscar and Tell; he was also their distant cousin. The Meuricoffre (German Moerikhofer) were wealthy Swiss bankers who immigrated to Naples in 1760 to facilitate trade with the Kingdom for the fine silk of Calabria. To repay large financial debts Alfred Bourguignon had accrued from casino and horse gambling, he repeatedly embezzled the bank bringing it to bankruptcy. Although Alfred Bourguignon died in September 1903, Banca Meuricoffre continued trading until 1905 by which time it was insolvent and went into liquidation. The financial damage brought to the Meuricoffre family was significant, having to sell warehouses, agricultural land, the apartment of Palazzo Caprioli, and the Casa Grande of Capodimonte, and an estate in Ischia. The financial activities of the bank were subsequently transferred to Credito Italiano, which opened in Naples in July 1905.
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Woolf, Greg. "Food, poverty and patronage: the significance of the epigraphy of the Roman alimentary schemes in early imperial Italy". Papers of the British School at Rome 58 (novembre 1990): 197–228. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s006824620001165x.

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CIBO, POVERTÀ E PROTEZIONE SOCIALEIn quest'articolo si vuole analizzare il carattere dell'azione imperiale attraverso un riesame degli alimenta in Italia. Si ipotizza che queste distribuzioni alimentari non venivano organizzate per risollevare dalle difficoltà economiche particolari regioni o particolari gruppi sociali dell'Italia romana. La distribuzione di alimenti, epigraficamente attestata, è in relazione alla distribuzione generale delle iscrizioni all'interno dell'Italia: le iscrizioni stesse non suggeriscono che i fruitori fossero una parte impoverita della popolazione, ma piuttosto fossero persone relativamente privilegiate, certo come italici, cittadini e residenti in centri urbani e forse anche come abitanti in una determinata città dell'Italia. Il significato di questi schemi è poi definito dalla loro collocazione all'interno di contesti ideologici suggeriti dalla concezione romana sulla distribuzione del cibo e del potere, sulla protezione e sul ruolo dell'imperatore. Testimonianze iconografiche, numismatiche e letterarie sugli alimenta, assieme a confronti con simili istituzioni, consentono di comprendere questa forma di approvvigionamento alimentare all'interno di familiari modelli di discorso romani; esse indicano i modi all'interno dei quali questi schemi possono essere stati concepiti e valutati. Si ipotizza che l'affermazione e l'elaborazione degli alimenta va vista come un elemento di quegli scambi simbolici fra gli imperatori e l'Italia, in un periodo in cui i primi sempre in minor numero avevano origini italiche o non vi erano residenti.
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Rovetta, Alessandro. "Le Osservazioni sull’architettura in Lombardia di Gaetano Cattaneo (1824): tra Jean-Baptiste Seroux d’Agincourt, Carlo Bianconi e Giuseppe Bossi". Storia della critica d'arte: annuario della S.I.S.C.A. 1 (2020): 229–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.48294/s2020.013.

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Gaetano Cattaneo (1771-1841), founder of the Numismatic Cabinet of Brera, inherited in 1815 from Giuseppe Bossi the historiographical materials that the secretary of the Brera Academy had collected with the aim to create a work dedicated to the history of Lombard art. Cattaneo also devoted himself to the project of a History of the arts and artists of the Lombard school, which never came to light, although its preparation is largely documented by his correspondence with Italian and foreign scholars, such as Cicognara, De Lazara and Passavant. A trace of Cattaneo’s work survives in an unpublished manuscript, kept in the Biblioteca Ambrosiana. In a schematic form, the document reconstructs the history of architecture in Lombardy from the Middle Ages to the sixteenth century, though it was supposed to be continued until the early nineteenth century. The information provided by Cattaneo about the origins of the different “epoche”, in which he divides the developments of Lombard architecture, as to the distinctive structural and stylistic characteristics or as to the masters and their main works offer a very interesting insight into the Milanese historiographical consciousness in the time between French domination and Restoration. The essay considers in particular the judgment on the different phases of the Middle Ages, with particular regard to the profile of Longobard architecture and the origins of the Milan Cathedral. In this case both local debates and the work of Seroux D’Agincourt are fundamental for Cattaneo. Another significant theme is the judgment on the architecture of the sixteenth century in Lombardy, which re-evaluates Leonardo, resizes Bramante and, above all, censors the protagonists of the Borromean age, from Galeazzo Alessi to Francesco Maria Richino. In this respect, the internal debate at the Brera school of architecture and the historiographical positions of Carlo Bianconi and Giuseppe Bossi played an important role, other significant latest sources such as Francesco Antonio Albuzzi and Venanzio De Pagave. The essay reports the complete edition of Cattaneo’s text according to the Ambrosian copy, which was probably made by his collaborator Carlo Zardetti.
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Hummler, Madeleine. "Mediterranen archaeology - OLIVER Dickinson. The Aegean from Bronze Age to Iron Age: Continuity and change between the twelfth and eighth centuries BC. xvi+298 pages, 57 illustrations, 2 tables. 2006. Abingdon: Routledge; 978-0-415-13589-4 hardback; 978-0-415-13590-0 paperback £16.99; 978-0-203-96836 e-book. - D. Evely (ed.). LefkandiIV. The Bronze Age: The Late Helladic IIIC Settlement at Xeropolis (British School at Athens Supplementary Volume 39). xviii+332 pages, 104 figures, 103 plates, CD-ROM. 2006. London: British School at Athens; 0-904887-51-0 hardback £98 + p&p. - CATIE Mihalopoulos. Corpus of Cypriote Antiquities 29: Cypriote Antiquities in Collections in Southern California (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology XX, 29). 64 pages, 54 plates. 2006. Savedalen: Paul Astrom; 978-91-7081-220-0 paperback. - Peter Attema, Albert Nijboer & Andrea Zifferero (ed). Papers in Italian Archaeology VI. Communities and Settlements from the Neolithic to the Early Medieval period (Proceedings of the 6th Conference ofItalian Archaeologyheldat the University ofGroningen, Groningen Institute ofArchaeology, The Netherlands, April 15-17, 2003) (British Archaeological Report International Series 1452 I & II). xx+1080 pages, numerous illustrations & tables. 2005. Oxford: Archaeopress; 1-84171-888-2 paperback £120 (both volumes). - Stephan Steingräber, translated by Russell Stockman. Abundance of Life: Etruscan Wall Painting from the Geometric period to the Hellenistic period (published in Italian as Pittura murale etrusca by Arsenale, Verona 2006). 328 pages, 250 colour illustrations. 2006, Los Angeles (CA): J. Paul Getty Museum; 978-0-89236-865-5 hardback £80. - John R. Patterson. Landscapes & Cities: Rural Settlement and Civic Transformations in Early Imperial Italy. xiv+348 pages, 17 illustrations. 2006. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 978-0-19-8140887 hardback £60. - Richard Hodges. Eternal Butrint: A UNESCO World heritage Site in Albania. xiv+256 pages, numerous b&w & colour illustrations. 2006. London: Butrint Foundation//General Penne; 978905680-01-6 hardback. - Arthur Evans. Ancient Illyria: An Archaeological Exploration (first published as Antiquarian Researches in Illyricum in Archaeologia 1885 & 1886; other paper in Numismatic Chronicle 1880 and introduction by John Wilkes in Bulletin of the Institute of Archaeology, London 1976). xxii+340 pages, 143 illustrations. 2006. London; I.B. Tauris/Centre for Albanian Studies; 978-84511-167-0 hardback £45. - Branko Kirigin, Nikša Vujnović, Slobodan Čače, Vincent Gaffney, Tomaž Podobnikar, Zoran Stančič & Josip Burmaz (ed. by Vincent Gaffney & Branco Kirigin). The AdriaticIslands Project Volume 3. The Archaeological Heritage of Vis, Biševo, Svetac, Palagruža and Štolta (British Archaeological Reports International Series 1492). iv+240 pages, 24 figures, 3 tables. 2006. Oxford: Archaeo-press; 1-84171-923-4 paperback £38. - Dominique Pieri. Le commerce du vin oriental ài l’époque Byzantine (Vè-VIIèsiècles): le temoignage des amphores en Gaule (Bibliothèque Archéologique et Historique 174). vi+350 pages, 199 illustrations, 9 tables. 2005. Beyrouth; Institut Francais du Proche-Orient; 2-912738-30-X paperback €40." Antiquity 81, n. 311 (1 marzo 2007): 246–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00120186.

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Brocchieri, Jessica, Rosa Vitale e Carlo Sabbarese. "MA‐XRF analysis of ancient silver coins minted in southern Italy". X-Ray Spectrometry, 20 agosto 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/xrs.3395.

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AbstractAt the Museo Campano (Capua, Italy), eight double‐relief silver coins belonging to southern Italian poleis and dated between the end of the 5th century and the beginning of the 3rd century BC were analysed. These coins are of great interest to historians and archaeologists because they provide extensive evidence on the monetary history and circulation of coins since the earliest times in the Campania region. Non‐invasive in situ analyses were performed using point XRF and MA‐XRF measurements and digital microscope photos. These coins were of high fineness. Data analysis methods using ROI imaging, deconvoluted maps, NMF (nonnegative matrix factorization), and k‐means were applied on the elemental maps to study the critical surface areas and to compare the effectiveness of different methods not commonly used for coins. These results combined with numismatic studies provided information on the historical context, the alloy used, and cases such as subaerati and restored coins. Important data were obtained on the currencies of the period under review, which will be useful to integrate with the analysis of further samples.
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Tesi sul tema "Italian Numismatics"

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Grönwald, Holger [Verfasser], e Sebastian [Akademischer Betreuer] Brather. "Archäologie und Geschichte des hoch- und spätmittelalterlichen Landesausbau im Friaul – Rolle und Entwicklung der Burg Cucagna und ihrer Ausstattung im Nordosten Italiens = Archaeology and history of the High and Late Middle Age land development in Friuli – The role and development of Cucagna castle and its environs in the northeast of Italy = Evidenze archeologiche e evoluzione del sistema insediativo in Friuli in epoca medie-vale – Ruolo e sviluppo del Castello di Cucagna e del suo equipaggiamento nel nord-est Italia". Freiburg : Universität, 2015. http://d-nb.info/1119716918/34.

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Crisafulli, Cristina. "Economia monetaria in Italia alla vigilia del IV secolo d.C. Il ruolo dell'antoniniano e dei suoi omologhi gallici alla luce delle fonti numismatiche e storico-letterarie". Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Padova, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/11577/3425130.

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The starting point of this work has been a recording of the finds of coins dated between 238 and 275 A.D. and found in the territories of the ancient Italy and of the roman provinces of Sicily and of Sardinia et Corsica. So we have considered not only all the coin hoards closing in this period and those ones later that have a large percentage of coins of this period, but also the stray finds. For best classifying the coins it was necessary update the most important catalogue today in use (The Roman Imperial Coinage, V) tanks to the most recent bibliography, i.e. for example the works about the hoards of Cunetio and of La Venera. The data recorded have been used for trying to define the development of the monetary system and the mint organisation in this age and for analysing the dynamics of the coin circulation in Italy in this period so critical for the Roman Empire, not only for what concerning the political aspects, but also for the monetary situation. In that way we have tried to understand the role of the most characteristic and important coin of this period: the antoninianus.
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Seelentag, Gunnar. "Taten und Tugenden Traians : Herrschaftsdarstellung im Principat /". Stuttgart : Steiner, 2004. http://books.google.com/books?id=2BNZAAAAMAAJ.

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Finetti, Fabrizio. "La representación del cuerpo en la iconografía numismática mediterránea occidental. El caso de las monedas del reino de Italia en el siglo XX (1900-1943)". Doctoral thesis, Universitat de Barcelona, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/393953.

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Abstract (sommario):
El cuerpo humano es un infinito objeto de estudio: un tema complejo que el pensamiento occidental ha investigado a fondo con todas las herramientas de sus disciplinas a lo largo de la historia. Este proyecto de investigación quiere contribuir de manera original a la historia del cuerpo en la cultura mediterránea occidental, y sobre todo en Italia, entre 1900 y 1943, estudiando cómo ha sido representado en una disciplina particular: la numismática. El trabajo se divide en cuatro partes. En la primera se define el marco teórico de la investigación, introduciendo los conceptos de cuerpo y numismática en el mundo "occidental". En la segunda sección se traza una historia de la representación del cuerpo en las monedas, a empezar de sus orígenes, mientras en la tercera se analiza la representación del cuerpo en un contexto numismático bien definido: el Reino de Italia en el siglo XX (1900-1943). A causa de las formas de gobierno que se han producido en aquella época, el estudio ha sido dividido en dos periodos. En cada uno se relaciona la situación política, económica y social del país con la idea de cuerpo contemporánea y, sobre todo, se analiza como esta idea ha sido reflejada y representada por el poder político, en las monedas. En la cuarta sección, además de elaborar un catálogo de las emisiones del reino de Italia que representan la figura humana en su iconografía, se propone un análisis comparativo entre la iconografía numismática de los países europeos mediterráneos estudiados.
The human body is an infinite object of study: a complex topic that the western thought has investigated thoroughly with all the tools of his disciplines along the history. This project of research wants to contribute in an original way to the history of the body in the Mediterranean western culture, and especially in Italy, between 1900 and 1943, studying as it has been represented in a particular discipline: the numismatics. The work is divided in four parts. In the first one the theoretical frame of the research is defined, introducing the concepts of body and numismatics in the "western" world. In the second section is planned a history of the representation of the body in the coins starting from the origins, while in the third one the representation of the body is analyzed in a numismatic well definite context: the Kingdom of Italy in the 20th century (1900-1943). Because of the forms of government that have taken place in that epoch, the 3rd section has been divided in two periods. In each one there is related the political, economic and social situation of the country to the contemporary idea of body and, especially, it is analyzed as this idea has been reflected and represented by the political power, in the coins. In the fourth section, beside elaborating a catalogue of the issues of the kingdom of Italy that represent the human figure in his iconography, we proposes a comparative analysis between the numismatic iconography of the studied European Mediterranean countries.
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Zipf, Gabriele [Verfasser]. "Studien zu den Anfängen figürlicher Darstellungen im endbronze- und früheisenzeitlichen Frankreich und Italien : Motive, Dekorträger und Kontexte / Gabriele Zipf". 2006. http://d-nb.info/981839908/34.

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Libri sul tema "Italian Numismatics"

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Italy) Giornata di studio 100 anni del Corpus nummorum Italicorum (2009 Milan. Giornata di studio 100 anni del Corpus nummorum Italicorum, Milano, 15 maggio 2009. Milano: Società numismatica italiana, 2010.

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The coinage of Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Italian Somalia. Garden City, N.Y: D. Gill, 1991.

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(Aldo), Siciliano A., a cura di. Attilio Stazio: Scritti di numismatica. Foggia: C. Grenzi, 2011.

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Casa, Marco Della. La monetazione cantonale ticinese: 1813-1848. [Bern]: Società svizzera di numismatica, 1991.

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Zecca e monete del comune di Pisa: Dalle origini agli inizi della Seconda Repubblica. Ghezzano (PI): Felici, 2010.

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6

Giovannelli, Filippo. Il fiorino: Storia, aneddoti e curiosità di una grande moneta. Italy]: AB, 2013.

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The Hohenstaufen's coins of the Kingdom of Sicily: Medieval Italian coins. Arricia, Italy]: Edizioni D'Andrea, 2013.

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8

Guasti, Andrea. La monetazione minore della Repubblica fiorentina, 1250-1533. Scandicci (FI) [i.e. Florence, Italy]: Tipografia Bertelli, 2007.

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9

Evdokimov, V. N. Numizmatika genuėzskoĭ Kaffy. [Toronto]: V. Evdokimov, 2002.

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Caro, Silvana Balbi de. Monete e popoli in Italia nell'età di mezzo. Cinisello Balsamo (Milano): Silvana, 1993.

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Capitoli di libri sul tema "Italian Numismatics"

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Horsnæs, Helle W. "Ancient Italian Numismatics". In The Peoples of Ancient Italy, a cura di Gary D. Farney e Guy Bradley. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781614513001-004.

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Grafton, Anthony. "1578-1580: Chronology as a Vocation". In Joseph Scaliger, 89–99. Oxford University PressOxford, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199206018.003.0009.

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Abstract We have now mapped the segments of chronology that Scaliger knew when he finished editing Manilius in 1578. Certain features dominate: the great volcanoes of Postel and Goropius, belching out their powerful new theses, overwhelm the flocks of modest schoolteachers quietly browsing over mentions of Attic months in classical texts and the Italian antiquaries bickering over the pieces of the Fasti. Every feature, great or small, is still seen at a fair distance, and much of it through a haze of uninvolvement. Chronology still seemed to Scaliger one Hilfswissenschaft among many, no more and no less pressing in its claims on his attention than numismatics, and far less so than epigraphy.
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Morghen, Marco, e Carlo Andrea Postinger. "Reperti numismatici". In Ricerche Archeologiche a Sant’Andrea di Loppio (Trento, Italia): L'Area della Chiesa, 239–43. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv15vwjmh.11.

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Polosa, Annalisa. "Coins and Civic Identities". In The Oxford Handbook of Pre-Roman Italy (1000--49 BCE), 683–93. Oxford University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199987894.013.7.

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Abstract The Greek cities of Sicily and the southern part of the Italian peninsula struck coins in precious metal from the second half of the sixth century BCE. Thus, this chapter begins by examining the role of coinage as an expression of civic identity in Magna Graecia, and then explores the indigenous populations’ approach to money, tracing its development up to the creation of the Roman monetary system. The Roman use of numismatic iconography to convey a message of identity is discussed, as is Rome’s role in the adoption by the indigenous peoples of Italy of coin types that referred to their traditions.
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