توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Minting, State, and Economy in the Visigothic Kingdom: From Settlement in Aquitaine to the First Decade of the Muslim Conquest of Spain
نام کتاب : Minting, State, and Economy in the Visigothic Kingdom: From Settlement in Aquitaine to the First Decade of the Muslim Conquest of Spain
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : ضرب، دولت و اقتصاد در پادشاهی ویزیگوتیک: از استقرار در آکیتن تا دهه اول فتح اسپانیا توسط مسلمانان
سری : Late Antique and Early Medieval Iberia
نویسندگان : Andrew Kurt
ناشر : Amsterdam University Press
سال نشر : 2020
تعداد صفحات : 424
ISBN (شابک) : 9462981647 , 9789462981645
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 6 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب :
این مطالعه در مورد سیستم پولی پادشاهی ویزیگوتیک در جنوب گال و هیسپانیا از قرن پنجم تا حمله مسلمانان به اسپانیا، شکاف بزرگی را در تحقیقات اواخر دوران باستان پر می کند. با بررسی تمام جنبه های ساخت پول، ضربات را در رابطه با مسائل دولت، قدرت سلطنتی، اداره و دستگاه، انگیزه های تولید پول و اقتصاد تعیین می کند. در زمینه امپراتوری روم بعدی و دولت های جانشین آن در غرب، ضرب و پول ویزیگوت ها الگوهای مشترک و همچنین اصالت را آشکار می کند. این تجزیه و تحلیل، هم زندگی اقتصادی و هم نیازهای دولت را با پیامدهای قابل توجهی برای مطالعه یک عنصر ضروری در زندگی روزمره و دولت در کانون توجه دقیق تری قرار می دهد. این مطالعه قدردانی از سطح شگفتانگیز پیچیدگی در سیستم ضربکاری ویزیگوتیک را با رویکردی در دسترس به موضوعی ترکیب میکند که میتواند پیچیده و مبهم به نظر برسد.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Pre-Regal Visigothic Coinage
A. The Fifth-Century Kingdom in Gaul
B. The Kingdom in Spain, 507-c. 573
2. The King’s Coinage: The Beginning and Development of the Regal Coinage (c. 573-c. 720)
A. The Transition to a Regal Coinage
B. Regal Coin Types
C. A Trimetallic System?
3. The Activities of the Mints from c. 573- c. 720
A. The Operation of the Mints
B. The Record of Mint Output
C. The Organization of the Mints
D. Metrological and Metallurgical Standards of Visigothic Regal Tremisses
4. Why Were Gold Coins Struck in the Visigothic Kingdom?
A. The Late Roman Context
B. Other Reasons for Minting
C. The Addition of Bronze to the Corpus
D. Visigothic Minting in the Context of Contemporary Monetary Systems
5. The Royal Control of Visigothic Minting
A. Evidence of Royal Control
B. The Significance of Centralized Monetary Authority
6. Coinage in Spain in the Aftermath of the Islamic Conquest
7. Visigothic Currency in the Early Medieval Economy
A. The Other Side of the Coin
B. Use and Circulation of Currency in the Kingdom
C. Bronze Currency in Spain and its Mediterranean Context
Conclusion
Appendix I
Appendix II
Bibliography
About the Author
Index
List of figures
Figure 1: Frequencies of Weights of Tremisses in the Name of Anastasius
Figure 2: Frequencies of Weights of Tremisses in the Name of Justin I
Figure 3: Frequencies of Weights of Tremisses in the Name of Justinian
Figure 4: Frequencies of Weights of Tremisses in the Name of Justin II
Figure 5: Frequencies of Weights of Pre-regal Tremisses Arranged by Attributed Mints or Minting Regions
Figure 6: Timeline of gold coin sets - estimated chronologies and metrological values
Figure 7: Proposed order of hoard contents related to Leovigild’s regal-name minting
Figure 8: Tremissis standards from averages immediately prior to and during Leovigild’s reign
Figure 9: Proposed chronology of the earliest Visigothic regal issues
Figure 10: Principal early facing-busts type forms297
Figure 11: Diagram of the patrimony’s divisions and the flow of proceeds into the fiscus
Figure 12: Difference in average regal tremissis weights between central and peripheral mints
Figure 13: Gold content of tremisses leading up to Leovigild’s facing-busts phase
Figure 14: Coinage within the kingdom’s political-economic system
Figure 15: Transitional dinar in Latin letters of 94H = 712-713 (ANS, currently catalogued as HSA 57.1255)
Figure 16: Bilingual dinar of 98H = 716-717 (ANS 1994.55.1)
Figure 17: Thulth (1/3 dinar) in Arabic of 102H = 720-721 (ANS 1917.215.3437)
Figure I.1: Weight and fineness measurements of Visigothic pre-regal tremisses at the ANS
Figure I.2: Comparison of intrinsic values between tremisses of Byzantine Spania, Constantinople and the Visigothic Kingdom
Figure I.3: Graph comparison of intrinsic values – tremisses of Byzantine Spania, Constantinople and the Visigothic Kingdom
Figure I.4: Map of gold mints in Visigothic Spain (c. 575 – c. 714)
Figure I.5: Schema of bust types of Visigothic regal tremisses
Figure I.6: Visigothic copper-alloy coins compared to tremisses
Figure I.7: Table of known regal mints
Figure I.8: Number of known mints from each reign
Figure I.9: Southern mints’ percentage of total corpus
Figure I.10: Individual mints’ percentage of total in southern-central Visigothic Spain
Figure I.11: Weight and fineness measurements by Lauris Olson of 377 Visigothic regal tremisses
Figure I.12: Averages of fineness and other measurements of gold coins at the ANS
Figure I.13: Frequencies of weights of Visigothic regal tremisses
Figure I.14: Average weights of tremisses at mints of diverse volumes of output
Figure I.15: Percentage of fineness in Visigothic tremisses of three major samples
Figure I.16: Average fineness of 238 tremisses tested using X-ray fluorescent spectrometry method
Figure I.17: Fineness of Visigothic pseudo-imperial tremisses, Visigothic regal tremisses, and early Muslim dinars in Spain
Plate I
Plate II
Plate III
Plate IV
Plate V
Tables of Regal Visigothic Tremisses Attributed to SeparateEngravers
Concordance of new ANS accession numbers for ex-HSA regal Visigothic tremisses
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب به زبان اصلی :
This study of the Visigothic kingdom's monetary system in southern Gaul and Hispania from the fifth century through the Muslim invasion of Spain fills a major gap in the scholarship of late antiquity. Examining all aspects of the making of currency, it sets minting in relation to questions of state, monarchical power, administration and apparatus, motives for money production, and economy. In the context of the later Roman Empire and its successor states in the West, the minting and currency of the Visigoths reveal shared patterns as well as originality. The analysis brings both economic life and the needs of the state into sharper focus, with significant implications for the study of an essential element in daily life and government. This study combines an appreciation for the surprising level of sophistication in the Visigothic minting system with an accessible approach to a subject which can seem complex and abstruse.