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A New Corpus of Roman Coins from England and Wales. An Overview of the Evidence and Analysis of the Data

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2024

Richard Henry*
Affiliation:
University of Reading Richard.Henry@pgr.reading.ac.uk
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Abstract

This paper considers a new corpus of 490,154 Roman coins (site finds) which have been recorded from England and Wales. The corpus provides British and regional means to aid in the preparation of coin reports in line with Historic England guidelines, along with spatial data providing new opportunities for research. The methods of data collection will be detailed and some of the possibilities this dataset can provide presented through a number of case studies. Through the consideration of applied numismatic analyses, the social distribution of the material and, crucially, the spatial distribution of Roman coinage, we can identify new trends and patterns. Case studies evaluating the fourth century will emphasise the changing importance of settlements in Roman Britain and identify those linked with the late Roman state. Furthermore, the retraction of coinage distributions in the second half of the fourth century will be explored. Building on the national and site type means explored within the paper, the full dataset has been made available in a range of forms on the Archaeology Data Service and in an interactive map developed by Maploom.

Information

Type
Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
Figure 0

TABLE 1 REECE ISSUE PERIODS AND ABCDEF PHASES USED AS PART OF THIS STUDY

Figure 1

FIG. 1. The distribution of sites in the military, urban, nucleated, rural and ‘other’ social categories for parishes with more than 25 coins (based on excavated data only). The nucleated category has been separated to indicate defended vici. These sites potentially played a crucial role in the late Roman administration. Further sites which fall into these categories but with limited numbers of coins recorded have not been mapped here.

Figure 2

TABLE 2 THE SOCIAL CATEGORIES AND SUB-TYPES CONSIDERED AS PART OF THIS STUDY.

Figure 3

TABLE 3 THE NATIONAL MEAN AND THE UPPER AND LOWER QUARTILE FOR PHASES A–E.

Figure 4

FIG. 2. The comparison of the British coin means from Reece, Walton and this study by Reece issue period.

Figure 5

FIG. 3. Cumulative analysis comparing the means from the military, urban, nucleated and rural corpora (excavated data only) against the British mean.

Figure 6

FIG. 4. Cumulative analysis of the sub-types within each of the four major site type categories (excavated data only) against the British mean.

Figure 7

FIG. 5. Comparison of the excavated and PAS datasets within the corpus – with a minimum of 25 coins from a parish.

Figure 8

TABLE 4 THE NUMBER OF PARISHES IN EACH SOCIAL CATEGORY AND THE PERCENTAGE

Figure 9

FIG. 6. Comparison of the PAS rural coin mean against the mean for rural sites and undefended nucleated settlements.

Figure 10

FIG. 7. The number of coins from parishes where a minimum of 25 coins have been recorded presented through graduating quantities (excavated and PAS data).

Figure 11

FIG. 8. The quantity of Roman coins from Phase A (to a.d. 260) from 1,379 parishes with a minimum of 25 coins identified to a Reece period (combining excavated and PAS data).

Figure 12

FIG. 9. Comparison of the upper and lower quartile of coins per mill from Phase A (To a.d. 260).

Figure 13

TABLE 5 THE PERCENTAGE OF EACH SOCIAL CATEGORY THAT FALLS WITHIN THE UPPER AND LOWER QUARTILE FROM PHASE A (TO A.D. 260)

Figure 14

FIG. 10. The quantity of Roman coins from Phase B (a.d. 260–296) from 1,407 parishes with a minimum of 25 coins identified to a Reece period (combining excavated and PAS data).

Figure 15

FIG. 11. Comparison of the upper and lower quartile of coins per mill from Phase B (a.d. 260–296).

Figure 16

TABLE 6 THE PERCENTAGE OF EACH SOCIAL CATEGORY THAT FALLS WITHIN THE UPPER AND LOWER QUARTILE FROM PHASE B (A.D. 260–296)

Figure 17

FIG. 12. The quantity of Roman coins from Phase C (a.d. 296–330) from 1,351 parishes with a minimum of 25 coins identified to a Reece period (combining excavated and PAS data).

Figure 18

FIG. 13. Comparison of the upper and lower quartile of coins per mill from Phase C (a.d. 296–330).

Figure 19

TABLE 7 THE PERCENTAGE OF EACH SOCIAL CATEGORY THAT FALLS WITHIN THE UPPER AND LOWER QUARTILE FROM PHASE C (A.D. 296–330)

Figure 20

FIG. 14. The quantity of Roman coins from Phase D (a.d. 330–364) from 1,402 parishes with a minimum of 25 coins identified to a Reece period (combining excavated and PAS data).

Figure 21

FIG. 15. Comparison of the upper and lower quartile of coins per mill from Phase D (a.d. 330–364).

Figure 22

TABLE 8 THE PERCENTAGE OF EACH SOCIAL CATEGORY THAT FALLS WITHIN THE UPPER AND LOWER QUARTILE FROM PHASE D (A.D. 330–364)

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FIG. 16. The quantity of Roman coins from Phase E (a.d. 364–402) from 1,337 parishes with a minimum of 25 coins identified to a Reece period (combining excavated and PAS data).

Figure 24

FIG. 17. Comparison of the upper and lower quartile of coins per mill from Phase E (a.d. 364–402).

Figure 25

TABLE 9 THE PERCENTAGE OF EACH SOCIAL CATEGORY THAT FALLS WITHIN THE UPPER AND LOWER QUARTILE FROM PHASE E (A.D. 364–402)

Figure 26

TABLE 10 THE RAW DATA FOR EACH MEAN DISCUSSED IN THE TEXT, BY REECE PERIOD

Figure 27

FIG. 18. Coinage produced after a.d. 402 (Phase F) mapped against the distribution of clipped siliquae recorded with the PAS.