Local elites and local coinage: elite self-representation on the provincial coinage of Asia 31 BC- AD 275

<p>The focus of this thesis is the nature of the interaction between the civic elites and the civic coinage for which they were responsible. The Roman Province of Asia provides the ideal context for the study of local elites and their coinage because of the prevalence and prominence of the nam...

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Main Author: Bennett, R
Other Authors: Howgego, C
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
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author Bennett, R
author2 Howgego, C
author_facet Howgego, C
Bennett, R
author_sort Bennett, R
collection OXFORD
description <p>The focus of this thesis is the nature of the interaction between the civic elites and the civic coinage for which they were responsible. The Roman Province of Asia provides the ideal context for the study of local elites and their coinage because of the prevalence and prominence of the names of individual local notables, henceforth known as eponyms, recorded in civic coin legends. By combining the study of the function of coin eponyms and the prosopographical analysis of individual eponyms in the epigraphic record, it is possible to identify and explain the profound changes that affected civic coin production in the first three centuries AD. Local elites perceived coinage not only in terms of a functional means of exchange, but as a medium for personal and civic display. In this way the local elites exploited coin iconography in ways that paralleled other media of monumental display. New coin legends were developed, which identified explicitly the dedicatory nature of the coinage and the iconographic repertoire of coin types was radically expanded to express the cultural agendas and priorities of the civic elites.</p><p>The first half of the thesis is devoted to the study of the relationship between office holding and coinage and the development of coin legend formulae during the first three centuries AD. The pattern and distribution of the various legend formulae is analysed in order to determine the extent of the eponym’s involvement in the production of coinage. In particular, this section intends to establish the extent to which coinage production was funded privately. The fourth chapter is arranged into a series of case studies discussing individual cases of personalized coin iconography. The final chapter of the thesis outlines how the civic elite’s conceptualization of coinage changed over the course of this period. It is argued that contact with the Roman monetary tradition affected civic elites’ attitude to coinage and that this manifested itself in the iconography and the fabric of the coins themselves.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:9e9c0f53-a961-4644-b30c-716bd8395f2e2022-03-27T00:51:20ZLocal elites and local coinage: elite self-representation on the provincial coinage of Asia 31 BC- AD 275Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:9e9c0f53-a961-4644-b30c-716bd8395f2eHistory of the ancient worldEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2011Bennett, RHowgego, CThonemann, P<p>The focus of this thesis is the nature of the interaction between the civic elites and the civic coinage for which they were responsible. The Roman Province of Asia provides the ideal context for the study of local elites and their coinage because of the prevalence and prominence of the names of individual local notables, henceforth known as eponyms, recorded in civic coin legends. By combining the study of the function of coin eponyms and the prosopographical analysis of individual eponyms in the epigraphic record, it is possible to identify and explain the profound changes that affected civic coin production in the first three centuries AD. Local elites perceived coinage not only in terms of a functional means of exchange, but as a medium for personal and civic display. In this way the local elites exploited coin iconography in ways that paralleled other media of monumental display. New coin legends were developed, which identified explicitly the dedicatory nature of the coinage and the iconographic repertoire of coin types was radically expanded to express the cultural agendas and priorities of the civic elites.</p><p>The first half of the thesis is devoted to the study of the relationship between office holding and coinage and the development of coin legend formulae during the first three centuries AD. The pattern and distribution of the various legend formulae is analysed in order to determine the extent of the eponym’s involvement in the production of coinage. In particular, this section intends to establish the extent to which coinage production was funded privately. The fourth chapter is arranged into a series of case studies discussing individual cases of personalized coin iconography. The final chapter of the thesis outlines how the civic elite’s conceptualization of coinage changed over the course of this period. It is argued that contact with the Roman monetary tradition affected civic elites’ attitude to coinage and that this manifested itself in the iconography and the fabric of the coins themselves.</p>
spellingShingle History of the ancient world
Bennett, R
Local elites and local coinage: elite self-representation on the provincial coinage of Asia 31 BC- AD 275
title Local elites and local coinage: elite self-representation on the provincial coinage of Asia 31 BC- AD 275
title_full Local elites and local coinage: elite self-representation on the provincial coinage of Asia 31 BC- AD 275
title_fullStr Local elites and local coinage: elite self-representation on the provincial coinage of Asia 31 BC- AD 275
title_full_unstemmed Local elites and local coinage: elite self-representation on the provincial coinage of Asia 31 BC- AD 275
title_short Local elites and local coinage: elite self-representation on the provincial coinage of Asia 31 BC- AD 275
title_sort local elites and local coinage elite self representation on the provincial coinage of asia 31 bc ad 275
topic History of the ancient world
work_keys_str_mv AT bennettr localelitesandlocalcoinageeliteselfrepresentationontheprovincialcoinageofasia31bcad275