The Kingdom of Cologne and the Early Frankish Silver Coinage (original) (raw)

Germania 100, 2022, p. 245-290

This paper presents a new catalogue of the Merovingian silver coins (argentei) found in the early 20th century in the cemeteries of Cologne-Rodenkirchen (34 hitherto unpublished coins) and Bonn-Schwarzrheindorf (26). The many (partly external) die links provided by the argentei from both cemeteries, and the analyses of the composition of some of the coins, make it likely that some issues are a local production that took place in Cologne between the mid-5th and the mid-6th century. These results permit us to consider the Kingdom of Cologne as a major minting authority in early Merovingian Gaul, where the beginnings of the Frankish coinage have traditionally been attributed to Clovis. Hence, the Roman legacy may have been a source of rivalry between the Ripuarian and the Salian Franks until Cologne lost its political significance after the mid-6th century.

Coin use in a dynamic frontier region: Late Iron Age coinages in the Lower Rhine area

2009

The introduction of money in the form of standardised objects of value made of metal and bearing images marked a new phenomenon in the pre-Roman societies of Western and Central Europe. In the Late Iron Age, the Lower Rhine region formed part of the northern peripheral zone of the La Tene culture, whose influence in this region has emerged as stronger than was previously thought. This is reflected among other things in the large numbers of ‘Celtic’ coins from this region. Although very little was known about these coins until about , the number of coins in the archaeological record, as well as what we know about them, has increased dramatically in recent decades. This study seeks to survey these earliest coinages in the Lower Rhine region. We start with a few introductory remarks about the development of Celtic numismatics, and follow with a discussion of the research potential of coins from the Lower Rhine region. We then survey the evolution of coinage and coin production in t...

The context of the Szeged-Öthalom find: carolingian coins in Hungarian graves and comparable coins in other contemporary hoards

The present article will look at the five Carolingian coins found in the Szeged-Öthalom hoard in their numismatic context, namely how they compare with other finds of Frankish coins in Hungarian graves of the early tenth century, including one found, remarkably, in south-eastern France. We shall also compare these five Italian deniers with other coins from the same period discovered in other contexts, including not only hoards concealed by Franks on the Continent but also others representing the loot taken by Scandinavian invaders, who were raiding the Carolingian kingdoms from a different direction at the same time. This analysis will bring out a number of significant new insights, perhaps the most important being the reattribution of a number of the previously published Frankish and Italian coins found in other Hungarian graves.

Byzantine plate and Frankish mines: the provenance of silver in north-west European coinage during the Long Eighth Century (c. 660–820)

Antiquity, 2024

The late seventh-century introduction of silver coinage marked a transformation in the economy of north-west Europe, yet the source(s) of the silver bullion behind this change remains uncertain. Here, the authors use combined lead isotope and trace element analysis of 49 coins from England, Frisia and Francia to provide new insights into north-European silver sources during the ‘long eighth century’ (c. AD 660–820). The results indicate an early reliance on recycled Byzantine silver plate, followed by a shift c. AD 750 to newly mined metal from Francia. This change indicates the strong role of the Carolingian state in the control of metal sources and economic structures across the North Sea zone.

Loading...

Loading Preview

Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.

BECK L, ALLOIN E, MICHELIN A., TÉREYGEOL F., BERTHIER C., ROBCIS D., BOREL T., KLEIN U., Counterfeit coinage of the Holy Roman Empire in the 16th century: silvering process and archaeometallurgical replications, in Archaeometallurgy in Europe III, Bochum, 2015, p. 97–106.