IRIS publication 245477124
Julian, Arles, and the Eagle
RIS format for Endnote and similar
TY - JOUR - Woods, D. - 2014 - October - The Journal of Late Antiquity - Julian, Arles, and the Eagle - Published - () - Julian, Arles, eagle, coinage, mint - 7 - 1 - 49 - 64 - It is argued that the eagle which the mint at Arles intruded upon the reverse of most of the coins struck there during the reign of Julian the Apostate (AD361-63) was an issue mark.It seems to have represented the culmination of a tradition that had developed at Arles, Lyons, and Siscia whereby mint officials sometimes used abbreviations of their own names as issue marks. In this case, the use of an eagle suggests that Julian had appointed a certain Aquila or Aquilinus as procurator monetae at Arles. - John Hopkins University Press - 1939-6716 - http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/jla/summary/v007/7.1.woods.html - 10.1353/jla.2014.0002 DA - 2014/10 ER -
BIBTeX format for JabRef and similar
@article{V245477124, = {Woods, D. }, = {2014}, = {October}, = {The Journal of Late Antiquity}, = {Julian, Arles, and the Eagle}, = {Published}, = {()}, = {Julian, Arles, eagle, coinage, mint}, = {7}, = {1}, pages = {49--64}, = {{It is argued that the eagle which the mint at Arles intruded upon the reverse of most of the coins struck there during the reign of Julian the Apostate (AD361-63) was an issue mark.It seems to have represented the culmination of a tradition that had developed at Arles, Lyons, and Siscia whereby mint officials sometimes used abbreviations of their own names as issue marks. In this case, the use of an eagle suggests that Julian had appointed a certain Aquila or Aquilinus as procurator monetae at Arles.}}, = {John Hopkins University Press}, issn = {1939-6716}, = {http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/jla/summary/v007/7.1.woods.html}, = {10.1353/jla.2014.0002}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
AUTHORS | Woods, D. | ||
YEAR | 2014 | ||
MONTH | October | ||
JOURNAL_CODE | The Journal of Late Antiquity | ||
TITLE | Julian, Arles, and the Eagle | ||
STATUS | Published | ||
TIMES_CITED | () | ||
SEARCH_KEYWORD | Julian, Arles, eagle, coinage, mint | ||
VOLUME | 7 | ||
ISSUE | 1 | ||
START_PAGE | 49 | ||
END_PAGE | 64 | ||
ABSTRACT | It is argued that the eagle which the mint at Arles intruded upon the reverse of most of the coins struck there during the reign of Julian the Apostate (AD361-63) was an issue mark.It seems to have represented the culmination of a tradition that had developed at Arles, Lyons, and Siscia whereby mint officials sometimes used abbreviations of their own names as issue marks. In this case, the use of an eagle suggests that Julian had appointed a certain Aquila or Aquilinus as procurator monetae at Arles. | ||
PUBLISHER_LOCATION | John Hopkins University Press | ||
ISBN_ISSN | 1939-6716 | ||
EDITION | |||
URL | http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/jla/summary/v007/7.1.woods.html | ||
DOI_LINK | 10.1353/jla.2014.0002 | ||
FUNDING_BODY | |||
GRANT_DETAILS |