1,721,041 research outputs found
Bruno Callegher, Cafamao. Vol. IX. Monete dall'area urbana di Cafarnao (1968-2003)
Morrisson Cécile. Bruno Callegher, Cafamao. Vol. IX. Monete dall'area urbana di Cafarnao (1968-2003). In: Revue numismatique, 6e série - Tome 164, année 2008 pp. 505-508
Bruno Callegher, Cafamao. Vol. IX. Monete dall'area urbana di Cafarnao (1968-2003)
Morrisson Cécile. Bruno Callegher, Cafamao. Vol. IX. Monete dall'area urbana di Cafarnao (1968-2003). In: Revue numismatique, 6e série - Tome 164, année 2008 pp. 505-508
Beni comuni Beni in comune, a cura di Bruno Callegher, Paolo Evangelisti, Elisabetta Vezzosi
Relatore al convegno “Beni comuni Beni in comune, a cura di Bruno Callegher, Paolo Evangelisti, Elisabetta Vezzosi”, Webinar, 16 marzo 202
Bruno Callegher, Arianna D’Ottone (éd.), The Second Simone Assemani Symposium on Islamic Coins
Morrisson Cécile. Bruno Callegher, Arianna D’Ottone (éd.), The Second Simone Assemani Symposium on Islamic Coins. In: Revue numismatique, 6e série - Tome 167, année 2011 pp. 572-575
Preface
The numismatic documentation should be the outcome of recent archaeological investigations but also of archaeology “in the archives”, i.e. of recoveries at Museums in which Islamic money had been neglected. The need for a constructive comparison with ancient numismatics, especially in the reconstruction of its growth over the centuries, was brought to the attention with the project “Fontes Inediti Numismaticae Orientalis
4th Assemani Symposium on Islamic Coinage
Il Simposio Simone Assemani riunosce studiosi internazionali specializzati nello studio della Numismatica Islamica. La prima giornata del IV Simposio S. Assemani è stata dedicata a S. Assemani e ai documenti che gettano luce sulla sua biografia (mattina) e, quindi, alla storia degli studi di numimstica islamica in Europa nel XVIII secolo (pomeriggio). La seconda giornata del Simposio è stata dedicata a temi di ricerca diversi, ma tutti di carattere numismatico
Rara & singularis commixtio lucis, & tenebrarum! At the beginning of the studies on Arab-Byzantine coinage
During the pioneering studies on Islamic coins, one of the most controversial and difficult to understand themes was to explain the simultaneous presence of Christian symbols alongside Islamic ones, such as the name of the prophet or the shahada (one of the Five Pillars of Islam). Over the centuries some issues were correctly attributed to the Urtukids, others remained unexplained, such as those now attributed to the Arab-Byzantine series. The orientalists of the late eighteenth century, including Simone Assemani, remained elaborated only erudite and uncertain explanations, far from a correct reading of what was legible on the coins. Gaetano Cattaneo, the curator of the numismatic collections in Milan, was the first who identified the exact classification of these coins, thanks to a follis/fals of the Tiberias mint, coming from a Venetian collection dispersed in the trade market in Milan
Thousands of Tetrarchy Folles all over the World: ad Hypothesis of Re-composition
The Čentur’s hoard is well known in the numismatic literature as a result of a long series of finds that have been carried out over more than 20 years, all in the same site. Recently, some researchers have hypothesized that the discovery was unique, happened in the same period, but disclosed over the years mainly for reasons related to the geopolitical situation along the border between Italy and Yugoslavia. With the aim of trying to re-establish the missing part, a free-access database was planned to collect all the reliable and verified information. Some preliminary examples of this project suggest promising results
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