An epoch in the history of the coinage of Western Europe is marked by the introduction of a strictly autonomous and national currency in Visigothic Spain by King Leovigild (A.D. 568-586). His predecessors and contemporaries — and he himself until about the year 575 — had been content to issue anonymous imitations of the imperial coinage; but at the beginning of the fourth quarter of the 6th century this able and energetic ruler had achieved a degree of independence from Rome and Byzantium that finds numismatic expression in the striking of trientes bearing his own name. Rapidly, in the course of the final years of Leovigild's life, there evolve the main traits of an independent, national coinage of quite extraordinary interest, not only because of its character as the first really distinctive mediaeval coinage of the West but also because it continues virtually without interruption, and at a large number of mints widely dispersed over the Iberian peninsula, down through the long line of Leovigild's successors to the extinction of the kingdom by the Muslim invaders early in the 8th century.
Author(s): George C. Miles
Series: The Hispanic Numismatic Series, 2
Publisher: The American Numismatic Society
Year: 1952
Language: English
Pages: 586
City: New York
Foreword ix
Bibliography, Collections and Key to Abbreviations 1
Biographical Notices of the Visigothic Kings of Spain from Leovigild to Achila II 21
Evolution and Distribution of Types 43
Key to Types of Busts 54
The Legends 67
The Mints 69
Narbonensis 76
Tarraconensis 79
Carthaginensis 92
Baetica 103
Lusitania 114
Gallaecia 125
Epigraphy 147
Notes on Minting Technique 149
Metrology 154
Hoards of Visigothic Coins 165
The Corpus 173
Note on Arrangement 174
Leovigild 175
Hermenegild 199
Reccared 201
Liuvall 235
Witteric 239
Gundemar 253
Sisebut 258
Suinthila 273
Sisenand 301
Iudila 321
Chintila 322
Tulga 330
Chindasvinth 335
Reccesvinth 351
Wamba 367
Ervig 375
Egica 387
Suniefred 405
Joint Rule of Egica & Wittiza 406
Wittiza 431
Roderic 442
AchilaII 444
Appendix: Fabrications and Forgeries 447
Location of Specimens Illustrated in the Plates 499
Indices