Description
Book SynopsisThis volume of Medieval European Coinage deals with the coinage of south Italy, Sicily and Sardinia between the mid-tenth century, when Volume 1 ended, and the reign of Ferdinand the Catholic, on the threshold of the modern era. The complex background to the history of this region makes its coinages among the most interesting of medieval Europe.
Trade ReviewReview of the hardback: 'With its careful analysis and exhaustive bibliography, this volume will serve well as a handbook for the historian dealing with the economy of medieval southern Italy as well as for the numismatist classifying its coinage. When all of the volumes of the series are available, we will at least have the basis for a comprehensive view of the monetary development of medieval Europe.' Journal of European Economic History
Table of ContentsList of plates; List of figures; List of maps; List of tables; Preface; Abbreviations; Note on spelling; 1. Introduction; 2. Pre-Norman coinages, and minor states subsequently; 3. The Normans: from the conquest to the kingdom; 4. The Hohenstaufen, 1194–1266; 5. Charles I of Anjou, 1266–85; 6. Naples under the Angevins, from Charles II to René of Anjou, 1285–1442; 7. Sicily under the Aragonese, 1282–1416; 8. Sardinia, from the twelfth century to 1416; 9. The Aragonese dominions of Sicily, Sardinia and Naples (1416–1516); 10. Naples and south Italy, 1458–1504: Ferrante to Louis XII; Appendices; Bibliography; Catalogue; Concordances; Indexes.