FIRST COIN STILL A MATTER OF DEBATE Public Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 39, September 26, 2004, Article 16

    FIRST COIN STILL A MATTER OF DEBATE

    Regarding David Klinger's question about the first coins,
    Reid Goldsborough writes: "The question of the world's first
    coin, long debated, is still very much under debate, with many
    scholars joining in. In trying to answer the question, much
    depends on the definition you use for "coin." All coins are
    money (doesn't include exonumia) but not all money is in the
    form of coinage. Few numismatists would classify the flat
    roll of uninscribed bronze bullion at the Numismatic Museum
    in Athens, described in last week's E-Sylum, as a coin. Much
    also depends on how you interpret the archeological evidence
    or whose interpretation of the archeological evidence you
    believe. And much depends on how definitive you feel the
    evidence needs to be before you put forth or accept any
    given theory. I covered this debate, and argued for the
    Lydian Lion as the world's first coin, in recent articles for
    The Numismatist and The Journal of the Classical and
    Medieval Numismatic Society. I've also put together an
    expanded version of these articles at this Web page: Consolidated Articles "

Source URL Date published
  • 2004-09-26
Volume
  • 7

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