LANDMARK NUMISMATIC LITERATURE NOMINATIONS Público Deposited

Contenido del artículo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 3, January 15, 2006, Article 13

    LANDMARK NUMISMATIC LITERATURE NOMINATIONS

    Larry Gaye writes: "Regarding landmark numismatic works -
    while not pertaining to U.S. numismatics, one in my
    opinion is "Monnaies Byzantines" by Rodolfo Ratto on
    December 9, 1930, the first sale of a private collection
    of Byzantine coinage that served as an information source
    for collectors. Not until David Sear published "Byzantine
    Coins and Their Values" in 1974 was there a comprehensive
    "guide" to this important series."

    David Palmer writes: "With regard to Landmark Numismatic
    Literature, I would nominate the EAC '75 Sale catalog.
    Due to the fact that so many varieties of Connecticut
    Coppers were illustrated and described, I believe it
    revolutionized collecting in that area of Confederation
    era coinage. Before this catalog, all the collector had
    was Dr. Hall's manuscript, when you could find it, with
    no pictures whatever. Collecting Connecticuts up to this
    time was difficult, at best. Interestingly enough, to me
    at least, is that I started collecting Large Cents and
    Connecticuts in 1980, joined EAC, and never heard of
    that catalog, until about 1986, when I was able to pick
    up the catalog at a local coin show, along with the
    Kessler-Spangenberger Sale for about $5 for the pair.
    One of my better non coin purchases."

    Michael E. Marotta writes; "Walter Breen's Complete
    Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins created the
    current standard for academic scholarship in numismatics.
    The footnotes, references, documentation, and citations
    made it necessary for any subsequent work to deliver the
    same craftsmanship. For a generation now, numismatic
    histories cite sources: the newspapers and journals of
    the time; and previous articles and books. Beyond "U.S.
    and Colonial" issues, all knowledgeable collectors expect
    more from auction listings than "Coin. Date. Ruler's
    Head/Legend. Eagle/Legend. Price." Minimalist listings
    define common material, while truly desirable objects
    earn solid attributions.

    Breen also "cracked the code" of the U.S. Mint. He made
    estimates of actual coin production by year, despite the
    tallying methods for which all coins struck in a fiscal
    year were counted alike, regardless of the numerals in
    the exergues. That dedicated investigation set the
    standard for the best writing in our hobby."

    Bill Bremmer writes: "I would nominate B. Max Mehl's
    The Star Rare Coin Encyclopedia and Premium Catalogue.
    Supposedly it got millions of people looking through
    their change."

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2006-01-15
Volumen
  • 9

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Autor NNP