Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- 1 Texts, Discourses, and Devices: Reading Visigothic Society Today
- 2 Presence of Augustine of Hippo in Isidore of Seville: Some Provisional Remarks
- 3 The Bishop and the Word: Isidore of Seville and the Production of Meaning
- 4 Unearthing Peasant Societies: Historiography and Recent Contributions in the Archaeology of the Rural World during Visigothic Times
- 5 Excolentes sacra fontium vel arborum: Pagan Cults, Kinship, and Regimes of Sacralization in the Visigothic Kingdom of Toledo
- 6 Ervig and Capital Penalties: The Way of Exile
- 7 ‘Put All Your Trust in Ansemundus’: A Look at Distrust in Visigothic-Byzantine Diplomatic Relations
- 8 Visigothic Currency: Recent Developments and Data for Its Study
- Index
8 - Visigothic Currency: Recent Developments and Data for Its Study
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- 1 Texts, Discourses, and Devices: Reading Visigothic Society Today
- 2 Presence of Augustine of Hippo in Isidore of Seville: Some Provisional Remarks
- 3 The Bishop and the Word: Isidore of Seville and the Production of Meaning
- 4 Unearthing Peasant Societies: Historiography and Recent Contributions in the Archaeology of the Rural World during Visigothic Times
- 5 Excolentes sacra fontium vel arborum: Pagan Cults, Kinship, and Regimes of Sacralization in the Visigothic Kingdom of Toledo
- 6 Ervig and Capital Penalties: The Way of Exile
- 7 ‘Put All Your Trust in Ansemundus’: A Look at Distrust in Visigothic-Byzantine Diplomatic Relations
- 8 Visigothic Currency: Recent Developments and Data for Its Study
- Index
Summary
Abstract
Ten years after the publication of La moneda visigoda (2009), it is now possible to retrospectively analyse its data and present new developments that have taken place. The corpus has expanded with isolated archaeological findings, besides the new monetary treasure from Toledo and the detailed study of the treasure of Seville. The vast material mobilized by the numismatic market and the opportunity to view specimens in private collections are also highly important. All this is likely to substantially shift the panorama on Visigoth coinage: the number of known pieces, the issuing workshops and, moreover, the chronology of certain emissions. This chapter provides a full update of our current knowledge of Visigoth currency, including statistical data to facilitate projects of other disciplines.
Keywords: Numismatics, Monetary Circulation, Visigothic Coinage, Coin Finds, Gold Coins, Tremissis
Introduction
One of the most salient characteristics of Visigothic coinage is its scarcity, especially in comparison with that from other historical periods. The relatively small size of the available repertoire, however, only makes for a more attractive research subject, especially since it goes hand in hand with another important aspect: the large number of known dies, and thus of typological varieties, in proportion to the total number of specimens. As a result, new types are being discovered constantly and the repertory needs to be regularly updated.
In the decade that followed the publication of La moneda visigoda, many new discoveries have occurred, increasing the number of known coins and providing new evidence concerning the issuing mints and the chronology of certain series. Some of these recent developments are the result of archaeological work, which has become more efficient in the discovery of coins through the use of metal detectors and it is possible to highlight the hoard identified on La Vega Baja site in Toledo. Also important have been developments in the numismatic market, which has brought forth some exceptional specimens, hitherto hidden from scholarly research in private collections. Especially significant in this regard is the Valle de Los Pedroches Hoard (Córdoba). The decade has also witnessed renewed interest in topics that lay almost forgotten, such as the early stages of Visigothic coinage, with the detailed study of the Calle Cuna Hoard, found in Seville in 1972 and its comparison with the hoard found at Zorita de los Canes (Guadalajara).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Framing Power in Visigothic SocietyDiscourses, Devices, and Artifacts, pp. 181 - 216Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2020