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Segnalo la recente pubblicazione su Academia.EU di uno studio sull'argomento spesso dibattuto sul forum: Razvan Bogdan Gaspar - Counterfeiting Roman Silver Coins in the 1st – 3rd centuries A.D. Study on Roman Provinces from Middle Danube to Lower Rhine.

" The newly written paper for Roman imperial silver coins is
expanding the studied area of counterfeited silver coins discovered on
archaeological sites by analyzing a hole geographic region stretching from the
middle Danube in the East to the shores of the lower Rhine in the West.
Aiming to prove the existence of a centralize pattern regarding silver plated
coins distribution, the study expanded its investigation to include the random
appearance of hybrid and plated hybrid coins. Besides this the focus will
remain on counterfeited pieces, their proportions and distribution, with a
smaller case study for the Severian period during when most plated pieces
were dated for.
Towards the end of the study new results can finally support previous debated
arguments regarding coin distribution and patterns of distribution in frontier
provinces, alongside with Rome’s approach to silver plated pieces. "

 

Modificato da FlaviusDomitianus
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Il 10/6/2018 alle 15:26, FlaviusDomitianus dice:

Segnalo la recente pubblicazione su Academia.EU di uno studio sull'argomento spesso dibattuto sul forum: Razvan Bogdan Gaspar - Counterfeiting Roman Silver Coins in the 1st – 3rd centuries A.D. Study on Roman Provinces from Middle Danube to Lower Rhine.

" The newly written paper for Roman imperial silver coins is
expanding the studied area of counterfeited silver coins discovered on
archaeological sites by analyzing a hole geographic region stretching from the
middle Danube in the East to the shores of the lower Rhine in the West.
Aiming to prove the existence of a centralize pattern regarding silver plated
coins distribution, the study expanded its investigation to include the random
appearance of hybrid and plated hybrid coins. Besides this the focus will
remain on counterfeited pieces, their proportions and distribution, with a
smaller case study for the Severian period during when most plated pieces
were dated for.
Towards the end of the study new results can finally support previous debated
arguments regarding coin distribution and patterns of distribution in frontier
provinces, alongside with Rome’s approach to silver plated pieces. "

 

 

Grazie per la segnalazione. Argomento molto discusso e interessante.


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