Search results
Coversheet for the Roman Coin Identification Template, containing the file-level metadata required by the Archaeology Data Service (ADS) to archive and disseminate data. Follows the Microsoft Excel template and examples provided on the ADS Guidelines for depositors webpages (Version 4.1 April 2021).
The Roman Coin Identification Template is provided as an .xlsm file – a macro-enabled spreadsheet created by Microsoft Excel. The embedded macros relate to the 3 dropdown lists (DENOMINATION; EMPEROR / ISSUER; MINT) and improve the Template’s functionality.
Downloads. The templates and lists developed for the Toolkit for Finds Reporting: Roman Coinage are available for download here: Roman Coin Identification Template + Resources (.XLSM, 300KB), containing: ADS_spreadsheet_metadata.
The project records every published type of Roman Imperial Coinage from Augustus in 31 BC, until the death of Zeno in AD 491. This is an easy to use digital corpus, with downloadable catalog entries, incorporating over 43,000 types of coins.
How to identify roman coins. Before starting, I remind you that you have the tool "image search engine" https://www.all-your-coins.com/en/search-by-picture/romaines-167/ " for already identify the emperor and the type of reverse. The associated legends for each emperor and each type.
13 kwi 2022 · With the advent of Online Coins of the Roman Empire (OCRE) database, a joint project of the American Numismatic Society and the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World (ISAW) at New York University, identifying Roman imperial coins generally has become even easier without the need to thumb through the pages of RIC and flip back-and-forth ...
18 kwi 2024 · For most of its history, Roman currency comprised gold, silver, bronze, orichalcum, and copper coinage. Introduced during the Republic in the third century BC and continuing through the Imperial period, the currency experienced various changes in form, denomination, and composition.