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This book, first published in 1991, is a full study of early
Hellenistic coinage. It provides a general history of the coinage
of Alexander the Great and his successors, and of the cities of
Greece and Asia Minor, over the century and a half 336-188 BC. Dr
Morkholm's detailed descriptions of the coins, and the 40 pages of
plates illustrating over 600 items, will provide a standard work of
reference for ancient historians, numismatists and collectors. His
original intention was to write a survey of Hellenistic coinage
down to the Roman acquisition of Egypt in 30 BC, but he died with
his project only half finished. The survey of early Hellenistic
coinage, however, is complete in itself. A short epilogue has been
added by Professor Grierson describing the main features of the
coinage after 188 BC.
This volume of Medieval European Coinage is the first
English-language survey to bring the latest research on the coinage
of Spain and Portugal c.1000-1500 to an international audience. A
major work of reference by leading numismatic experts, the volume
provides an authoritative and up-to-date account of the coinages of
Aragon, Catalonia, Castile, Leon, Navarre and Portugal, which have
rarely been studied together. It considers how money circulated
throughout the peninsula, offering new syntheses of the monetary
history of the individual kingdoms and includes an extensive
catalogue of the Aragonese, Castilian, Catalan, Leonese, Navarrese
and Portuguese coins in the collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum.
This major contribution to the field will be a valuable point of
reference for the study of medieval history, numismatics and
archaeology.
This volume of Medieval European Coinage deals with the coinage of
south Italy, Sicily and Sardinia between the mid-tenth century,
when Part I ended, and the reign of Ferdinand the Catholic, on the
threshold of the modern era. It thus covers very different coinages
of the immediate pre-Norman period and those of the Norman,
Hohenstaufen, Angevin and Aragonese dynasties, which in turn ruled
part or the whole of the Mezzogiorno. The complex background to the
history of this region makes its coinages among the most
interesting of medieval Europe. They have rarely been studied
together or in a single volume, and the work, which makes extensive
use of written evidence and coin finds, will take its place as the
standard work of reference for the foreseeable future.
This, the first volume of Medieval European Coinage, surveys the
coinage of Western Europe from the fall of the Roman Empire in the
West in the fifth century to the emergence of recognizable
'national' political units in the tenth. It starts with the
Vandals, Visigoths, Burgundians and other Germanic invaders of the
Empire, whose coins were modelled on contemporary issues of the
Western or Eastern emperors. The coinage of the Franks is followed
from early Merovingian times through to the establishment and
subsequent fragmentation of the Carolingian empire. Italy is
represented by the coinages of the Ostrogoths, Lombards,
Carolingians and popes down to the Ottoman conquest in the
mid-tenth century. The coinage of the Anglo-Saxons is traced from
the introduction of minting in the early seventh century to the
emergence of a united kingdom during the first half of the tenth
century, including the aberrant coinages of Northumbria and the
Anglo-Viking coinages of the Danelaw.
This volume of Medieval European Coinage is the first
English-language survey to bring the latest research on the coinage
of Spain and Portugal c.1000-1500 to an international audience. A
major work of reference by leading numismatic experts, the volume
provides an authoritative and up-to-date account of the coinages of
Aragon, Catalonia, Castile, Leon, Navarre and Portugal, which have
rarely been studied together. It considers how money circulated
throughout the peninsula, offering new syntheses of the monetary
history of the individual kingdoms and includes an extensive
catalogue of the Aragonese, Castilian, Catalan, Leonese, Navarrese
and Portuguese coins in the collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum.
This major contribution to the field will be a valuable point of
reference for the study of medieval history, numismatics and
archaeology.
In volume 2 of this series, Part I examines Phocas and Heraclius
(602-641) and Part II covers the period between Heraclius
Constantine to Theodosius III (602-717).
This volume is in two parts. Part I covers the reigns of Alexius I
to Alexius V (1081-1204), and Part II covers the emperors of Nicea
and their contemporaries (1204-1261).
Part I includes the introduction, appendices and bibliography while
Part II continues with the catalogue, concordances and indexes.
Text extracted from opening pages of book: BOOKS ON SOVIET RUSSIA
1917-1942 A Bibliography and a Guide to Heading by PHILIP GRIERSON,
M. A. FELLOW OF GONVILLE AND CAIU8 COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE METHUEN &
CO. LTD., LONDON 36 Essex Street, Strand, , W. C. 2 First published
in 1943 BOOK PRODUCTION VMEOKDMY THIS BOOK IS PRODUCED IN COMPLETE
CONFORMITY WITH THE AUTHORISED ECONOMY STANDARD PU1MT1E1> IN
GREAT BRITAIN PREFACE THIS book represents the first attempt to
compile a list of books and pamphlets on post-revolutionary Russia
that have been published in Great Britain. The period that it
covers is the twenty-five years between February 1917 and the end
of June 1942. But a mere list of names and titles, while it might
be of value to a fairly restricted class of librarians and
booksellers, would be of little use to the general public, and
there is at present a serious need for some kind of guide to the
enormous and very varied literature in existence on the Soviet
Union. I have therefore tried to make the bibliography acceptable
to a wider public by including in it a certain number of works
chiefly collections of documents and personal memoirs * published
outside Great Britain, mainly in the United States or in the Soviet
Union and occasionally in languages other than English, and by
adding to each item a note on its character and the point of view
from which it is written. In both these features the personal
factor is involved, and it is in them that I shall probably lay
myself most open to criticism. The choice of foreign works has
depended on the extent and the vagaries of my own reading and
knowledge to some degree also on my estimate of the availability in
England of the books I mention andit will probably strike any
expert as most unsatisfactory. But while it would no doubt have
been very desirable to have planned something on the lines of
Kerner's Slavic Europe, there are insuperable obstacles to
attempting such, a compilation under present circumstances. Too
many libraries are inac cessible, and it is either difficult or
impossible to communicate with scholars and publishers in other
countries. I hope, how* ever, that my references to foreign
literature may be found to be of use, though I give them with the
proviso that no attempt has been made to render them systematic and
that many excellent works have been left out altogether. The
comments on books and pamphlets are only intended to serve as a
rough guide to their character. I have tried to be as objective as
possible, and my judgments will, I think, vi BOOKS ON SOVIET RUSSIA
usually be found to err on the side of charity. My object otherwise
has been to give only those items of information which will enable
a reader to identify a book or pamphlet easily: the author's name,
the exact title, the number of pages, the publisher's name and the
date of publication. Some details which a strict bibliographer
might like to include, but which are of no practical importance,
have been omitted. For example, if a book, printed in the USSR, was
published in May 1983 and reprinted in England later in the same
year, the fact that one edition was printed in England and the
other was not has not been recorded unless there were other
differences between them. When a work has been reprinted a number
of times without any change, the exact dates of each reprint have
been omitted. It need scarcely be pointed out that a fairly
largeproportion of the books and the great bulk of the pamph lets
mentioned in this bibliography are long since out of print; they
can only be obtained second-hand or consulted in a library. It has
not always been easy to decide what items should be included and
what should be left out. The limitation to books and pamphlets has
been fairly strictly followed; only a few articles in periodicals
have been included for reference purposes, and off-prints of
articles have been omitted unless they were clearly put on the
market as pamphlets. A few books published in the early ye
This is the first fully illustrated catalogue of a major collection
of late Roman and early Byzantine imperial coins. It follows the
general layout of the Byzantine volumes in the Dumbarton Oaks
series, with a substantial introduction dealing with the history of
the coinage, including iconography, mints, and monetary system. In
this volume, however, all the coins are illustrated in the plates.
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