Coins and Politics in the Late Roman World

R. Reece
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Abstract

Coins constitute source material: explicitly, from what is written and portrayed on them or the place and authority in which they were struck, and implicitly, from the portrait style and type. They are also objects of metal, sometimes precious, the use and control of which reflects politics. Around 294, portraiture changed very sharply from individuality to the representation of authority. Reverse types were also now much more limited and concentrated than under the Principate. The change occurred around 274 to 294, when city mints also ceased local production and were either closed or made branches of the one Imperial mint. These are signs of a move towards a heavily centralised money supply, dictated by more strongly emphasised authority. Control of metals, especially gold, followed the same path, though reforms in the mid-4th c. may suggest that silver was let out of state control and ‘privatised’.
罗马晚期的硬币与政治
硬币构成了原始材料:明确地,从它们上面的文字和描绘,或者它们被击中的地方和权威,隐性地,从肖像的风格和类型。它们也是金属制品,有时是贵重的,对金属的使用和控制反映了政治。在294年左右,肖像从个性到权威的表现发生了巨大的变化。反类型现在也比元首制时期更加有限和集中。这一变化发生在274年至294年左右,当时城市造币厂也停止了当地的生产,要么关闭,要么成为皇家造币厂的分支。这些迹象表明,货币供应正朝着高度集中的方向发展,由更加强调权威的机构主导。对金属,尤其是黄金的控制也遵循了同样的道路,尽管4世纪中期的改革可能表明,白银脱离了国家的控制,被“私有化”了。
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