Of BNJ Contents 1903-2016

Of BNJ Contents 1903-2016

CONTENTS OF THE BRITISH NUMISMATIC JOURNAL VOLUMES 1 TO 86 (1903/4 - 2016) Edited for the British Numismatic Society by R. H. Thompson, FSA, MCLIP. 2011-16 Additions by R. Page, MSc, DIC. 2019 © THE BRITISH NUMISMATIC SOCIETY 2011 INTRODUCTION This listing is confined to the principal contributions to the Journal, including short articles and notes, but omitting reviews, exhibitions, and other proceedings of the Society; presidential addresses, however, have been included to the extent that they treat specific subjects. This list does not pretend to be an index; and users may like to note that there are (in addition to the indexes in each volume) cumulated indexes to each series as follows: Volumes 1-10 In vol. 10, pp. 393-402 11-20 20, pp. 397-410 21-30 30, pp. 396-417 31-40 40, pp. 209-239 41-50 50, pp. 161-185 51-60 60, pp.191-209 61-70 70, pp. 203-213. 71-80 81, pp. 319-333 In the references the volume number is given in arabic numerals, the roman numerals of the first fifty volumes being converted into arabic. The year is the titular date of the volume, not the date of publication, nor (where they differ) the years of the proceedings contained in that volume. The numbers of plates given in the references are the pages of illustrations (including charts, facsimiles, and maps) which are additional to the text pages; in Volumes 52-57, and occasionally elsewhere, the plates are incorporated in the numbering of pages. The aim of the subject arrangement is to display the contents under convenient headings, subdivided where references are numerous; and most papers appear in one place only. In the headings Anglo-Saxon kings are spelt as in the Handbook of British Chronology. Titles of articles of course follow the original, as do authors’ names, without editorial intervention, e.g. R. H. M. Dolley or M. Dolley, V. J. Butler or V. J. Smart; Kristin Bornholdt now publishes as K. Bornholdt Collins. Forenames have usually been reduced to initials except where they seem to be used as surnames (as some became), e.g. Shirley Fox, Elmore Jones. Citation order is first ‘Personality’: coins by the series or reign (sections II and III), then matter (V), minting (VI), and finding (VII). Section VI is confined to papers on mints which cover more than one reign. Section VII is for reports of hoards extending to more than one reign, and series of finds from excavations; whereas a study of the hoard evidence for Alfred is placed under ‘Alfred (871-899)’, and an unpublished hoard-provenance for a penny of Ceolwulf II under ‘Kings of Mercia (796-877)’. Section I is General, and Section IV covers artefacts other than coins: medals, tokens, paper money, coin weights, pots and other hoard containers, etc. CONTENTS I. GENERALITIES...........................................................................................................................................5 British Numismatic Society. British Numismatics. Chronology. Coinages and Currencies. Collections, Museums. Forgery. Forgery-Contemporary. Illustration of Coins. Maundy, Largesse and Dole. Metrology. Names and Naming. Numismatic Methods. Numismatists. Photography. Touch pieces, Angels. II. ANCIENT COINS.........................................................................................................................................10 Iron Age Coins. Roman Coins. III. MEDIEVAL AND MODERN COINS.........................................................................................................13 English Coins - General; Collections. a. English coins to 1066........................................................................................................................13 Anglo-Saxon Coins. Thrymsas and ‘Sceattas’ (c. 600-750). Kings of Northumbria, Archbishops of York. Kings of Kent. Archbishops of Canterbury. Offa (757-96). Kings of Mercia (796-877). Kings of East Anglia. Viking Invaders. Kings of Wessex (786-871). Alfred (871-99). Edward the Elder (899-924). Athelstan (924-39). Edmund (939-46). Edred (946-55). Edgar (959-75). Edward the Martyr (975-78). Ethelred II (978-1016). Cnut (1016-35). Harold I, Harthacnut (1035-42). Edward the Confessor (1042-66). Harold II (1066). b. English coins 1066 to date ................................................................................................................24 William I and II (1066-1100). Henry I (1100-1135). Stephen (1135-54/8). Henry II Cross and Crosslets Type (1158-80). Short Cross Type (1180-1247). Henry III (1216-72). Henry III/Edward I Long Cross Type (1247-78). Sterling Type (1279-1335). Edward III (1335-77). Richard II (1377-99). Henry IV, Henry V (1399-1422). Henry VI (1422-61). Edward IV to Richard III (1461-85). Henry VII (1485-1509). Henry VIII (1509-47/51). Edward VI (1547-53). Mary, Philip & Mary (1553-58). Elizabeth I (1558-1603). James I (1603-25). Royal Farthing Tokens (1613-44). Charles I (1625-49). Commonwealth, Protectorate (1649-60). Charles II, James II (1660-88). William III (1694-1702). Anne (1702-14). George III (1760-1820). George IV (1820-30). Victoria (1837-1901). George V to Elizabeth II (1910-). c. Other countries..................................................................................................................................37 Ireland – General; Hiberno-Norse Coins; Anglo-Irish Coins; John to Edward I (1171-1307);........... Edward III (1327-77); Edward IV to Richard III (1461-85); Henry VII to Elizabeth (1485-1603); Siege Money (1642-49); Charles II, James II (1660-88/91); Currency. Irish Sea Imitations of English coins. Scotland - General; David I to John Baliol (1124-1296); Robert Bruce to Robert III (1306-1406); James I, James II (1406-60); Ecclesiastical issues; James III to James V (1460-1542); Mary, James VI (1542-1625); Charles I to Anne (1625-1714). Wales. Continental Coins and Countermarks. Continental Imitations of English, Irish and Scottish Coins. Merovingian Coins. Carolingian Coins. Anglo-Gallic Coins. Scandinavian Imitations of English Coins. Byzantine Coins. Oriental Coins. British Commonwealth and Empire. Mediterranean and Channel Islands. India. Americas. Australasia. IV. ARTEFACTS OTHER THAN COINS .......................................................................................................45 Artefacts - General. Badges. Coin jewellery. Coin Weights and Balances. Counters, Jettons. Engraved Pieces. Medals - General; Jacobite; Military; Naval; Personal. Paper Money. Pots and other Containers. Primitive Money. Seals. Tickets and Passes. Tokens - General; Countermarked and Engraved; Early; Seventeenth-Century; Eighteenth-Century; Early Nineteenth-Century; Mid-Nineteenth-Century to date. V. METALS AND OTHER MATERIALS.................................................................................................53 Assaying. Bullion Supplies. Clipping and Clippings. Leather. Metallurgy. VI. COIN AND MEDAL PRODUCTION..........................................................................................................54 Designs - General; Royal Portraits. Die Axis. Die-Sinkers, Engravers, Medallists. Dies and Punches. Edges and Edging. Mint Marks. Minting Techniques, Equipment, Supplies. Mints - General; Specific Mints; Tower/Tower Hill/Llantrisant. Moneyers and Mint Officials. Patterns, Piedforts, Proofs, Trial Pieces. 3 VII. FINDS AND HOARDS (Mediaeval and Modern).................................................................................... 60 Papers too general to be placed with a particular reign or series, e.g. an early fourteenth-century coin hoard from the Co. Roscommon, which discusses coins of Ireland, England, Scotland and the Continent; whereas a paper on two finds of Edward pennies, which barely mentions the two continental coins, appears under ‘Sterling type (1279-1335) - Finds’. Finds of ancient coins are in Section II. Hoards in general, Treasure Trove. Finds - British Isles; England; Europe (Continental); Ireland; Isle of Man; Scandinavia; Scotland; Wales. 4 I. GENERALITIES British Numismatic Society D. F. Allen, [Recollections of the Society], 32 (1963), 231-34 P. Woodhead, [The Society’s functions], 47 (1977), 164-66 P. Woodhead, [The formation and early years of our Society], 48 (1978), 150-52 H. Pagan, ‘The British Numismatic Society: a history’, 73 (2003), 1-43, 14 pls. H. Pagan [and] C. Farthing, ‘Members of the British Numismatic Society 1903-2003’, 73 (2003), 213-67 British Numismatics P. W. P. Carlyon-Britton, ‘Introduction: British numismatics’, 1 (1903-04), 1-8 D. F. Allen, [The human side of coins], 30 (1960-61), 208-09 C. W. Peck, [Research on the milled coinages], 33 (1964), 192-93 C. W. Peck, [Coin history of later periods; and, Rarity as it applies to numismatics], 34 (1965), 194-98 S. E. Rigold, ‘A discourse on method and terminology’, 40 (1971), 198-201, 204 P. Woodhead, [The importance of an awareness of related fields], 46 (1976), 101-07 H. E. Pagan, [The first century of the study of coins in Britain], 57 (1987), 173-80 I. Stewart, ‘English numismatics - progress and prospects’ (The Howard Linecar Lecture 1988), 58 (1988), 110-22 H. Loyn, ‘Numismatics and the medieval historian: a comment on recent numismatic contributions to the history of England c. 899-1154’ (The Howard Linecar Lecture 1990), 60 (1990), 29-36 H. E. Manville, ‘Square pegges and round robins: some mid-eighteenth century numismatic disputes’, 60 (1990), 99-112 V. Hewitt, ‘Modern coins and paper money’, 73 (2003), 128-36, pls. R.J. Eaglen ‘What is the point of numismatics?’ (Presidential address 2011), 82 (2012), 203-209 G.E.M

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