Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
15 Ιουλ 2016 · The first Greek coins appeared in Aegina c. 600 BCE (or even earlier) which were silver and used a turtle as a symbol of the city's prosperity based on maritime trade. Athens and Corinth soon followed Aegina's lead.
11 Μαΐ 2013 · A brief introduction by Metcalf describes the production method of ancient coinage, the circumstances of its modern discovery and the consequences of both of these for its study. He then very briefly surveys what can be done with coinage as historical, art historical, and economic evidence.
introduction of coinage and had much to do with the way in which coinage developed in Greece. It follows that not every exchange relationship can be seen, even metaphorically, as a type of monetary relationship and that the extent to which coinage changed the Greeks’ way of acting—the subject of the present book—must be investigated ...
The Invention of Coinage and the Monetization of Ancient Greece. David M. Schaps. University of Michigan Press, 2004 - Antiques & Collectibles - 293 pages. The invention of coinage was a...
This silver coinage soon became, for about a century and a half, the most accepted international currency of the Greek world, replacing in that role the Athenian owls.
The development and use of coinage in the Greek world is surveyed in this book from its introduction in the 7th century BC to the late Hellenistic period. Coins can illuminate many facets of...
10 Φεβ 2012 · The Oxford Handbook of Greek and Roman Coinage. This book attempts to make accessible to students, scholars, and the lay public annotated, up-to-date information regarding the major coinages of the Greco-Roman world.