There are 3,371 more Roman coins on the web than there were yesterday. I just mention it. If I can get a search string worked out that actually gives you my contribution without the larger and more irksome work on the bronzes done by my predecessor, I may mention it again. It’s nice to have one’s work visible like this.
Update: a more direct link is here. You have to wade through four or five pages of Islamic coins that I didn’t scan, but did correct on the same day as the Roman upload went live, but after that you’re into genuine Augustan silver, so there. On the other hand some of the Islamic stuff is actually medieval, even if not tenth-century, which is about as on-topic as this post will get…
19 August 2007 at 4:07
[...] to me—is Jonathan Jarrett’s blog, A Corner of Tenth Century Europe, a site that combines Cambridge, coinage, and Carolingian Catalonia. It’s definitely the sort of blog that will teach you [...]