A FIND OF PRE-SEVERAN ROMAN DENARII IN UKRAINE, DISCOVERED IN COMMERCE

R. D. Leonard Jr.
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Abstract

A group of Roman silver denarii minted prior to 194 A.D., and imitations of them, said to have been “Dug up in Ukraine,” appeared on the U.S. market in 2018. The goal of this paper is to discuss finds of Roman denarii in Ukraine briefly, to record four examples from this otherwise unpublished find, and to place these pieces in the context of currency in Ukraine in Late Antiquity. European Barbaricum – the areas lying outside the Roman Rhine, Danubian and British limites in the end of the Second Century A.D., to the Volga River in the east, including inland Ukraine but not including the Caucasus region and the Black Sea coast – used Roman silver denarii as currency, though probably merely by weight; over 500 denarii hoards from this area have been published, of which 95 were from Ukraine. There is evidence that these coins circulated for a century or more after they became obsolete in the Roman Empire itself, because of the heavy wear present on many examples. Though the size and location of the find which surfaced in 2018 – and whether it represents a hoard or single finds – cannot be determined, from the number seen (10 to 15), it is more likely to have been a hoard rather than a series of single finds. (Because of the manner in which the coins were sold, it was not possible to contact the seller readily; also, it was doubted that truthful information would be obtained anyhow, since the coins were presumably removed from Ukraine illegally.) Four examples preserved from it are published herein. These are: Denarius of Sabina, 128–136, very worn (2.62 g vs. normal weight of 3.0–3.2 g). Diademed bust right/Juno standing left (C 37, RIC II Hadrian 395A). Denarius of Antoninus Pius, 143/4, very worn (3.02 g) and apparently a fourrée, with base metal showing at top of head. Laureate head right/caduceus between two cornucopiae (RIC III, 107B). Struck copy (fourrée?) of denarius of Commodus, 190, very worn (1.82 g [sic!]). Laureate head right/Minerva advancing right (RIC III Commodus 222A). The surface is two-tone, as if plating is coming off, or dissolved silver from burial was redeposited. Struck copy (fourrée?) of denarius of Antoninus Pius – Commodus, 138–192, very worn (1.67 g [sic!]). Laureate head right/Ceres (?) standing left, pseudo? inscriptions. On this coin also it appears that silver plating is coming off, or dissolved silver from burial was redeposited.  The presence of imitation denarii is not unexpected, because 15 of the recorded 95 denarii hoards found in Ukraine contained them. However, the very light weight of these two examples is unusual, and may indicate that a base metal core dissolved from acidic soils, leaving only a thick silver plating. Nearly all denarii hoards from European Barbaricum close with those of Commodus, 192 A. D.; from 148, the denarius maintained a standard of approximately 75–80% silver, but Septimius Severus reduced the standard to about 65% in 194, and to about 56% two years later. At this point most “Barbarians” refused to accept them as silver, and later denarii are nearly always absent from hoards. The same pattern can be seen in this group. These pieces offer further evidence that Roman denarii circulated (as silver, by weight) in Ukraine long after issue, some becoming very worn. Their dating is given as circa 200–400 A. D., though this is very approximate. No attempt is made here to assign them to a particular ethnic group.
在乌克兰的商业活动中发现了一枚前罗马货币
一组公元194年之前铸造的罗马银币,以及据说是“在乌克兰挖出来的”的仿制品,于2018年出现在美国市场上。本文的目的是简要讨论在乌克兰发现的罗马银币,记录这一未发表的发现中的四个例子,并将这些碎片置于古代晚期乌克兰货币的背景下。欧洲的蛮族(Barbaricum)——公元二世纪末位于罗马莱茵河、多瑙河和英国边界以外的地区,向东至伏尔加河,包括乌克兰内陆,但不包括高加索地区和黑海沿岸——使用罗马银币作为货币,尽管可能只是按重量计算;已经公布了来自该地区的500多枚第纳尔,其中95枚来自乌克兰。有证据表明,这些硬币在罗马帝国本身过时后流通了一个世纪或更长时间,因为许多例子都有严重的磨损。虽然无法确定2018年发现的这一发现的大小和位置,以及它是一个窖藏还是单个发现,但从所看到的数量(10到15个)来看,它更有可能是一个窖藏,而不是一系列单一的发现。(由于硬币出售的方式,不可能轻易联系到卖家;此外,人们怀疑无论如何都无法获得真实的信息,因为这些硬币可能是非法从乌克兰运走的。)从它保存下来的四个例子在这里发表。这些是:萨比娜的迪纳留斯,128-136,非常磨损(2.62克,正常体重3.0-3.2克)。右边有王冠的胸像/左边站着的朱诺(C 37, RIC II哈德良395A)。Antoninus Pius的Denarius, 143/4,非常磨损(3.02 g),显然是一个四人面,在头部顶部显示贱金属。桂冠头右/在两个聚角之间的杯尾(RIC III, 107B)。190年康茂德斯银币的刻制副本(4r ?),非常磨损(1.82克[sic!])。桂冠右头/密涅瓦右推进(RIC III Commodus 222A)。表面是双色的,好像镀银正在脱落,或者从埋藏中溶解的银被重新沉积。Antoninus Pius - Commodus, 138-192,非常磨损(1.67 g [sic!])的denarius的雕刻副本(fourr ?)桂冠女神头右/谷神星(?)站左,伪?铭文。在这枚硬币上,似乎镀银正在脱落,或者从埋葬中溶解的银被重新沉积。仿造的第纳瑞币的存在并不意外,因为在乌克兰发现的记录在案的95枚第纳瑞币中有15枚含有仿造的第纳瑞币。然而,这两个例子非常轻的重量是不寻常的,这可能表明碱性金属核心从酸性土壤中溶解,只留下一层厚厚的镀银层。几乎所有来自欧洲蛮族的银币储备都接近于康茂德,公元192年。d;从148年开始,银币的标准是大约75-80%的银,但塞普提米乌斯·塞维鲁在194年将标准降至65%左右,两年后降至56%左右。在这一点上,大多数“野蛮人”拒绝接受它们作为白银,后来的迪纳瑞几乎总是不在储备中。在这一组中也可以看到同样的模式。这些碎片提供了进一步的证据,表明罗马银币在发行很久之后就在乌克兰流通了(按重量计算是银币),有些已经磨损得很厉害了。它们的年代大约在公元200-400年。D,虽然这是非常近似的。这里并没有试图把他们归为某个特定的种族群体。
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