Grosvenor Museum, Chester. Part II : Anglo-Saxon Coins and Post-Conquest Coins to 1180
by
Hugh Pagan
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Sylloge of Coins of the British Isles
ISBN-10
0197265022
ISBN-13
9780197265024
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Feb 2nd, 2012
Print length
120 Pages
Weight
716 grams
Dimensions
25.30 x 19.50 x 1.80 cms
Product Classification:
Exhibition catalogues & specific collectionsCoins, banknotes, medals, seals (numismatics)
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This volume fully catalogues and illustrates an important collection of Anglo-Saxon and Norman coins, which is especially rich in pennies struck under the kings who ruled c. 900-80. A detailed introduction lays out the history of coin production at Chester and the surrounding region, which was one of the principal monetary centres of the period.
This is the second and concluding volume in the SCBI series devoted to the collection of Anglo-Saxon and Norman coins in the Grosvenor Museum, Chester. The Grosvenor Museum''s holdings in this field derive partly from the matchless collection of coins of the Chester mint formed during the first half of the twentieth century by Dr Willoughby Gardner (1860-1953), and partly from a succession of major hoards of tenth-century date discovered in the city of Chester at intervals since the 1850s.As a result, the Grosvenor Museum collection is of national importance for the study of tenth-century Anglo-Saxon coinage, and the present volume describes and illustrates hundreds of previously unpublished coins of this period.The volume also contains an introductory essay discussing the history of the Chester mint between its foundation in the early years of the tenth century and the major reform of the English coinage carried out in the closing years of the reign of King Edgar (959-75). It explains how to distinguish coins struck at Chester from comparable coins struck at neighbouring mints including Derby, Stafford and Tamworth, and puts on record the fact that during Chester''s mid-tenth-century heyday its moneyers were more numerous and probably more productive than those at such other major English cities as London and Winchester.
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