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Ancient Trade and Early Coinage by Michael Mitchiner Volume 1 & 2 2004
Hawkins, London, 2004, two volumes: Large format, well illustrated, matching blue leatherette, 30 x 21.5 cm, 1,420 pages, with almost 6,000 coins catalogued and the great majority illustrated. The author looks at history and trade from a new perspective; hence coinage is also looked at from a new viewpoint. The theme of long distance trade, particularly in metals, permeates the whole of this study. The influence of population movements across the Eurasian steppe and also into more southerly regions is a second theme and the influence of climatic changes on long distance trade and on population movements provides a third. Considered alongside the archaeological evidence, these themes provide a new insight into the rise and fall of cultures across the Afro-Eurasian land mass. The results of this approach include a fundamental re-writing of Indias early history and a less radical re-orientation of that of early China. The complex web of trading patterns meant that few places were economically, or culturally, isolated by the time coinage was introduced in Lydia shortly before 600 BC. The electrum coinage minted in the inland kingdom of Lydia (Western Turkey), and by Greek trading partners in coastal Ionia, together with the first bi-metallic coinage made in gold and in silver by Croesus, are considered down to the time of the Persian conquest in 546 BC, and the subsequent Persian repressions during following years. A new classification is proposed, partly on the basis of punch-marked reverse coin designs. Nearly 300 coins are catalogued in this section. The rise of the Persian Empire caused fundamental changes to trading patterns around the Eastern Mediterranean. Aegina entered its phase of commercial prosperity. Silver now became the principal metal used for making coins. During the period from 545 BC until the end of the Persian Wars in 479 BC, many places began minting their own coins. Coinage minted during this period is examined southeastwards to Rhodes, Lycia and Cyprus, then northeastwards to the coastlands around the Black Sea. The copper token currencies and coinages of the Northern Black Sea region are discussed. The silver coinage of the Thrace-Macedon region leads on to that of Central Greece, including Athens and Corinth. This section concludes with the archaic coinages of South Italy, Sicily and Cyrenaica. Nearly 1,000 archaic coins of the period circa 545 to the 470s BC are catalogued, including a few later issues. Some coin series are re-dated. Weight standards are discussed and the denominational structures of many coin series are revised.
Later Greek coinage is not discussed since the aim of this study is to consider the coinage of each region from its commencement, down to the period when there is general agreement about its interpretation, as a result the cut-off date differs for each region. The next section focuses on coinage minted in the south. Coins minted in Phoenicia, Samaria, Judea and Bambyce prior to the Macedonian conquest are followed by coins minted in the Northwest Arabian Kingdom, in the Southwest and Southeast Arabian Kingdoms. The coinage of Southeast Arabia is considered in greatest detail because it is the least studied series, consequently its classification is revised. Coinage minted across the northern belt includes a short survey of the Celtic series, with particular reference to potin coinages and the tin trade and of Spanish coinage with particular reference to the Spanish silver trade and the expansion of Rome. Coinage of the Danubian region is discussed in the context of trade in tin and silver. The main focus for this northern section is the nomad migration from the steppe that brought fundamental political and economic changes to Afghanistan and Pakistan during the late second and the first centuries BC. The political history of Bactria and the datings of relevant Indo-Greek kings are revised. The southerly expansion of the Yuezhi is revised in line with the evidence provided by trading patterns and coinage. Particular attention is paid to the silver crisis across the region. The cut-off period here is the consolidation of the Kushan kingdom in the first century AD. Some 650 coins are catalogued in the two sections on the southern and the northern regions. The Persian Empire provides the subject for the last section in volume one. The chronology and mints for the daric-siglos coinage are revised. Some revisions are also made to the classification of satrapal coinages minted during the fourth century BC. The coinage of the Eastern Satrapies forms an integral part of any discussion of the Persian Empire, its history and its trade. The chronology of the Chaman Hazouri (Kabul) hoard is revised. The bent bar and fractional coinage minted in Northern Pakistan is re-classified and dated after circa 485 BC. Indian history is fundamentally revised for reasons that are discussed in detail. The kingdoms of the Middle Ganges plain began minting coins in the middle of the fifth century BC, a period when Indo-Persian trade began improving local prosperity. Local weight standards were Indian derivatives of the Babylonian and Persian weight standards used for Indo-Persian trade. The various local punch-marked coin series minted by Hindu states belonging to the Northern Black Polished Ware culture, and by non-Hindu states belonging to several Black and Red Ware cultures are discussed down to the foundation of the Mauryan Empire in the late fourth century BC. Mixed coin hoards, changes in coin weights, coin provenances and changing patterns of trade routes provide the basis for a fundamental re-interpretation of early Indian coinage. Some 1,850 coins are catalogued in the pre-Mauryan section. The Mauryan Empire, together with its various silver and copper coin series, is discussed in context with evidence provided by such sources as Ashokas inscriptions and the Arthashastra. The numismatic evidence attests preservation of the Mauryan trading nexus until the last years of the empire, whereas historical sources and coins also indicate political de-centralisation during the Empires late decades. Indian and Greek sources, as well as local Greek-style coin series, attest the fall of the Mauryan Empire close to 175 BC. Selected later Indian coin series are discussed, particularly those with a punch-marked form. Some 900 Mauryan and post-Mauryan coins are catalogued. Early Chinese coinage is discussed in context with changing patterns of internal and external trade, together with analyses of the chemical compositions of coins. Zhou, Qin and Han dynasty coins and other currency pieces are catalogued from their commencement close to 500 BC, until Wang Mangs reign in the early first century AD. Chemical compositions shed new light both on the trade in metals and also on monetary organisation. The Han mint reorganisation of the late second century BC is reflected in coin alloys. Nearly 300 coins are catalogued in this section and half of the coins have had their leaded bronze coin alloys analysed. The last section of volume two deals with selected later eastern coin series. The gold coinage of Bangladesh, down to the eighth century AD, is partly re-classified in the light of new specimens. The various silver coin series of Arakan, Harikela and South East Asia are re-classified in the light of changing patterns of trade, and particularly the decline in maritime trade that followed the adverse climatic event of the mid sixth century AD. Several coin series can be dated before this phase, and others afterwards. Political reverses suffered by Chinas Tang Dynasty in the middle of the eighth century were associated with changes to the metal trade, especially to the tin trade. This is discussed in context with Central Asia, with the Kingdom of Nanchao (Yunnan), and with the local leaded copper-arsenic coin alloys used in Japan. Representative early Japanese cash, whose chemical compositions have been analysed, are catalogued. There are several appendices, an extensive bibliography, a table of suggested coin values and an index. |