Source: http://nomisma.org/browse
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 18:21:26+00:00

Document:
1 to 100 of 5610 total results.
The Byzantine emperor Michael VI Bringas.
An individual who issued coins at the ancient city of Abdera, 473/470-449/448 BC. See J. May, The Coinage of Abdera (540-345 B.C.) (London, 1966), pp. 44-48.
Sinjar (Arabic: سنجار‎, Sinjar; Latin: Singara), also known as Shingal (Sorani Kurdish: شەنگال, Şengal; Classical Syriac: ܫܝܓܳܪ, Shiggor) and formerly Sanjár, is a town in Sinjar District, Nineveh Province, Iraq near Mount Sinjar. It is close to the border with Syrian Kurdistan. Its population in 2013 was estimated at 88,023. The town is mainly inhabited by Yazidis with Arab and Assyrian minorities.
An individual who issued coins at the ancient city of Abdera, 365/360-350/345 BC. See J. May, The Coinage of Abdera (540-345 B.C.) (London, 1966), pp. 44-48.
Daughter of the Roman emperor Constantius III.
Seleucid Coins Online is a digital type corpus of Seleucid numismatics, derived originally from the numbering system of the printed volume Seleucid Coinage, by Arthur Houghton and Catherine Lorber.
The Byzantine empress Theodora III.
The mint at the ancient site of Comama in Pisidia.
The Byzantine emperor Tiberios III.
Ahmad ibn Buya (Persian: احمد بن بویه), after 945 better known by his laqab of Mu'izz al-Dawla (Arabic: المعز الدولة الحمداني‎, "Fortifier of the Dynasty"), was the first of the Buyid emirs of Iraq, ruling from 945 until his death.
First magistrate attested in Athens during the first two months of 110/109 BC. From Trikorynthos. Belongs maybe to the same familiy as the second magistrate Agathokles, he is probably his son (his father's as well as his son's name is Agathokles). Both held the magistracy only for two months; reasons for their disappearance are dubious (Habicht 1991, p. 9 f.). Epimeletes in 140 BC (IG II 2. ed. 1939, 43), participating in the Rhomaia in Delos in 127/126 BC (ID 2596, 7): See M. Thompson, The New Style Silver Coinage of Athens (1961) nos. 709-722 / issue 55 (p. 565); C. Habicht, Zu den Münzmagistraten der Silberprägung des Neuen Stils, Chiron 21, 1991, pp. 5 and 9 f. (110/109 BC); Prosopographia Attica 5338; P. M. Fraser – E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names II Attica (1994) p. 164 s. v. Euboulides, no. 41; W. Leschhorn, Lexikon der Aufschriften auf griechischen Münzen II (2009) p. 499 s. v. Euboulides.
Term used to describe a category of coinage struck in the name of 'tribe' or other ethnic group.
The Hamdanid dynasty (Arabic: حمدانيون‎ Ḥamdānyūn) was a Shi'a Muslim Arab dynasty of northern Iraq (Al-Jazirah) and Syria (890-1004).
Ifriqiya or Ifriqiyah (Arabic: إفريقية‎ Ifrīqīya) or al-Maghrib al-Adna (Lower West) was the name of that area during medieval history that comprises what is todayTunisia, Tripolitania (western Libya) and the Constantinois (eastern Algeria); all part of what was previously included in the Africa Province of the Roman Empire.
The mint(s) at the city of Königslutter, Lower Saxony (German: Niedersachsen), Germany.
The mint at the ancient site of Rome in Latium.
The study of the coins, other numismatic items and numismatic history of the Ancient Greek World. At its broadest, this encompasses the numismatic productions of the Mediterranean world prior to the rise of Roman power, including such areas as Gaul, Britain, and Spain. It is appropriate to include the coinages of Greek cities under the empire in the study of Greek numismatics, though more recent scholarship emphasizes the imperial context of this material.
Seville (/səˈvɪl/, Spanish: Sevilla [seˈβiʎa] ( listen), locally: [seˈβiʝa]) is the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of Andalusia and the province of Seville, Spain. It is situated on the plain of the River Guadalquivir. The inhabitants of the city are known as sevillanos (feminine form: sevillanas) or hispalenses, after the Roman name of the city, Hispalis. Seville has a municipal population of about 703,000 as of 2011, and a metropolitan population of about 1.5 million, making it the fourth-largest city in Spain and the 30th most populous municipality in the European Union. Its Old Town, the third largest in Europe with an area of 4 square kilometres (2 sq mi), contains three UNESCO World Heritage Sites: the Alcázar palace complex, the Cathedral and the General Archive of the Indies. The Seville harbour, located about 80 kilometres (50 miles) from the Atlantic Ocean, is the only river port in Spain. Seville is also the hottest major metropolitan area in Europe, with summer average high temperatures of above 35 °C.
An individual who issued coins at the ancient city of Abdera, 492-473/470 BC. See J. May, The Coinage of Abdera (540-345 B.C.) (London, 1966), pp. 44-48.
Jürg Richter and Ruedi Kunzmann's Swiss coin type series.
The mint at the ancient site of Termessus in Pisidia.
As son of Mithradates V and Laodice VI he was born c. 134 BC in Sinope. From c. 120 until his death in 63 BC he ruled the Pontic kingdom. Because of his growing influence in Asia Minor he came in conflict with Rome, and as a consequence the balance of power in the Eastern Mediterranean was newly defined by the three "Mithradatic wars". In the course of these wars he issued rich currency. Also he is attested as first magistrate in Athens in 87/86 BC, explicitly identified as the Pontic king by the addition ΒΑΣΙΛΕ(υς): See M. Thompson, The New Style Silver Coinage of Athens (1961) nos. 1143-1146 / her issue 76 (p. 575); C. Habicht, Zu den Münzmagistraten der Silberprägung des Neuen Stils, Chiron 21, 1991, pp. 6 and 12 (87/86 BC, his issue 78); Prosopographia Attica 10186 and 10187; W. Leschhorn, Lexikon der Aufschriften auf griechischen Münzen II (2009) 687 s. v. Mithradates.
The eldest son of Nikolaus Longerich, Johann Adam was sworn in as Mintmaster for the Cologne Circle, Germany, on 22 October 1700 and held this position until his resignation on 6 November 1705. He was then Mintmaster in Jülich-Berg and Dortmund. Longerich was also the Mint Warden for the Lower Rhine-Westphalian Circle, as noted in the Protocols of 1700, 1705 and 1712, and mintmaster in Düsseldorf, 1707 and 1708. His mintmark was IAL. Lit.: Alfred Noss, Die Münzen der Städte Köln und Neuss: 1474-1794 (1926) pp. 47-49, 266, 275; Wolfgang Scheffler, Goldschmiede Rheinland-Westfalens - Aachen - Köln (1973) n. 1680, p. 584; F. W. A. Schlickeysen, Reinhold Pallmann - W. Spemann, Erklaerung der Abkuerzungen auf Muenzen der neueren Zeit, des Mittelalters und des Alterthums (1896) p. 222.
Al-Ashraf Sayf-ad-Din Barsbay was the ninth Burji Mamluk sultan of Egypt from AD 1422 to 1438. He was Circassian by birth and a former slave of the first Burji Sultan, Barquq.
First magistrate attested in Athens in 102/101 BC. From Phaleron. Brother of his colleague Poses (Habicht 1991, p. 10): See M. Thompson, The New Style Silver Coinage of Athens (1961) nos. 823-839 / issue 63 (p. 581); C. Habicht, Zu den Münzmagistraten der Silberprägung des Neuen Stils, Chiron 21, 1991, pp. 5 and 10 (102/101 BC); Prosopographia Attica 13825; P. M. Fraser – E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names II Attica (1994) p. 433 s. v. Timostratos, no. 26; W. Leschhorn, Lexikon der Aufschriften auf griechischen Münzen II (2009) p. 847 s. v. Timostratos.
Qazwin (/kæzˈviːn/; Persian: قزوین‎, ), also Romanized as Qazvīn, Caspin, Qazwin, or Ghazvin) is the capital of the Province of Qazvin in Iran.
Third magistrate attested in Athens in 123/122 BC. Most probably from Boeotia; his uncommon name is not attested otherweise in Athens. Thesmothetes in 128/127 BC. Participating in the Pythais as knight of the phyle Leontis (Habicht 1991, p. 20 f.; H. B. Mattingly, NC 157, 1997, p. 259): See M. Thompson, The New Style Silver Coinage of Athens (1961) nos. 479-482 / issue 41 (p. 557); C. Habicht, Zu den Münzmagistraten der Silberprägung des Neuen Stils, Chiron 21, 1991, pp. 5 and 20 (124/123 BC); Prosopographia Attica 2905; P. M. Fraser – E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names II Attica (1994) p. 89 s. v. Boukattes no. 2; H. B. Mattingly, NC 157, 1997, pp. 258 f. and W. Leschhorn, Lexikon der Aufschriften auf griechischen Münzen II (2009) p. 410 s. v. Boukattes (123/122 BC, issue 41).
The mint at the ancient site of Lalassis in Cilicia.
Roman moneyer operating under the authority of Augustus.
Abd al-Rahman I, or, his full name by patronymic record, Abd al-Rahman ibn Mu'awiya ibn Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan was the founder of a Muslim dynasty that ruled the greater part of Iberiafor nearly three centuries.
Magistrate attested in Abydos in c. 75-65 BC. See Th. Corsten, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names VA Coastal Asia Minor: Pontos to Ionia (2010) s. v. Xenophon (9); W. Leschhorn, Lexikon der Aufschriften auf griechischen Münzen II (2009) p. 724 s. v. ΞΕΝΟΦΩΝ. Chronology: LGPN VA (c.100-70BC); F. de Callataÿ, Abydos sur Aesillas, in: E. Kypraiou (ed.), Χαρακτήρ: Aφιέρωμα στη Mάντω Oικoνoμίδoυ. Athens 1996, p. 83 (c. 75-65 BC).
The mint at the ancient site of Sciathus on Sciathus off Thessaly.
Sion is a Swiss town, a municipality, and the capital of the canton of Valais and of the district of Sion.
Mintmaster in Bonn, a city in Germany, from 1739 to about 1776, in which year he is thought to have died, with monogram I K. Kohlaas was the son-in-law of Hittorff's widow. Lit.: Alfred Noss, Die Münzen der Erzbischöfe von Köln 1547-1794 (1925) pp. 350, 353, 415.
Mint Warden in Deutz, Germany, from 1615 to 1617. Lit.: Alfred Noss, Die Münzen der Erzbischöfe von Köln 1547-1794 (1925) p. 149.
Roman denomination equivalent in value to 10 aurei.
The mint at the ancient site of Cebren in Troas.
An individual who issued coins at the ancient city of Abdera, 375/373-365/360 BC. See J. May, The Coinage of Abdera (540-345 B.C.) (London, 1966), pp. 44-48.
The mint at the ancient site of Zeleia in Troas.
The mint of the Arcadian League at the ancient site of Megalopolis in Arcadia.
Generic term for a place of manufacture of a coin or for the issuing city.
The mint at the ancient site of Mesembria in Thrace.
The mint at the ancient site of Osset in Hispania Ulterior.
The mint at the ancient site of Gomphi in Thessaly.
An individual who issued coins at the ancient city of Maroneia, 386/385-348/347 BC. See E. Schönert-Geiss, Die Münzprägung von Maroneia (Berlin, 1987), pp. 44-45.
A series of military commanders in Baghdad who controlled the caliphs before the Buyids consolidated power in 334/Jan. 946.
Magistrate attested in Abydos in c. 375-325 BC. See Th. Corsten, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names VA Coastal Asia Minor: Pontos to Ionia (2010) s. v. Gorgias (19); W. Leschhorn, Lexikon der Aufschriften auf griechischen Münzen II (2009) p. 421 s. v. ΓΟΡΓΙΑΣ. For chronology, cf. G. Le Rider, Deux Trésors de monnaies grecques de la Propontide (IVe siècle avant J.-C.). Paris 1963, pp. 51-53.
Bardsir (Persian: بردسير‎, also Romanized as Bardsīr and Bardesīr; also known as Deh-e Now-e Mashīz, Mashīz,Mshiz, and Qal‘eh-ye Mashīz) is a city in and the capital of Bardsir County, Kerman Province, Iran.
The daughter of the Byzantine emperor Alexios I.
The mint at the ancient site of Pisa in Elis.
Irbil, also known as Hawler (orHewler;Sorani Kurdish:ھەولێرHewlêr,Arabic: أربيل‎Arbīl), is the largest city and capital of the Kurdistan Region.
Roman denomination equivalent in value to 1 1/2 solidi.
The mint at the ancient site of Zacynthus on Zacynthus, off Elis.
The Ilkhanate, also spelled Il-khanate (Persian: ایلخانان‎, Ilkhanan; Mongolian: Хүлэгийн улс, Hulagu-yn Ulus), was a breakaway state of the Mongol Empire, which was ruled by the Mongol House of Hulagu.
The mint(s) at the city of Mühlhausen, Thuringia (German: Thüringen), Germany.
The Oliver's Orchard Hoards were a Third Century Roman series of hoards within the same context discovered in 1983 near Colchester, Essex, UK (near Roman Camulodunum).

References: v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v.