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PRINTED BOOKS
Author Harl, Kenneth W.

Title Coinage in the Roman economy, 300 B.C. to A.D. 700 / Kenneth W. Harl.

Published Baltimore, Md. : Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 UniM Bail  737.4937 HARL    AVAILABLE
Physical description pages cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (page) and index.
Summary The premier form of Roman money since the time of the Second Punic War (218-201 B.C.), coins were vital to the success of Roman state finances, taxation, markets, and commerce beyond the frontiers. Yet until now, the economic and social history of Rome has been written independently of numismatic studies, which detail such technical information as weight standards, mint output, hoards, and finds at archaeological sites. In Coinage in the Roman Economy, 300 B.C. to A.D. 700, noted classicist and numismatist Kenneth W. Harl brings together these two fields in the first comprehensive history of how Roman coins were minted and used. Drawing on both literary and documentary sources, as well as on current methods of metallurgical study and statistical analysis of coins from archaeological sites, Harl presents a sweeping overview of a system of coinage in use for more than a millennium. Challenging much recent scholarship, he emphasizes the important role played by coins during overseas expansion of the Roman Republic during the second century B.C., in imperial inflationary policies during the third and fourth centuries A.D., and in the dissolution of the Roman Mediterranean order in the seventh century A.D. He also offers the first region-by-region analysis of prices and wages throughout Roman history with reference to the changing buying power of the major circulating denominations. And he shows how the seldom studied provincial, civic, and imitative coinages were in fact important components of Roman currency. Richly illustrated with photographic reproductions of nearly three hundred specimens, Coinage in the Roman Economy offers a significant contribution to Roman economic history. It willbe of interest to scholars and students of classical antiquity and the Middle Ages as well as to professional and amateur numismatists.
Subject Coins, Roman.
Coinage -- Rome -- History.
Rome -- Economic conditions.
ISBN 0801852919 (alkaline paper)

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