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Coins, Riches, and Lands: Paying for Military Manpower in Antiquity and Early Medieval Times [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 280 pages, height x width: 280x216 mm, 120 B/W illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Dec-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1789259908
  • ISBN-13: 9781789259902
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 67,72 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 280 pages, height x width: 280x216 mm, 120 B/W illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Dec-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1789259908
  • ISBN-13: 9781789259902
A study of how coins, riches and lands were gained and distributed among the soldiers, warriors, and mercenaries in the Antiquity and Early Medieval times.

Land was the ideal store of wealth in the ancient Mediterranean world. It brought social respectability, and its possession allowed participation in the politics of the cities governed by landowning elites. Crucial defense of the interests of a given polity through armed services often involved the distribution of lands to laborers still not integrated in these societies. Mediterranean urban dynamics also involved paid labor and were always in need of short-contract manpower, including skilled soldiers and warriors. For short-time military services, lands were not always available so soldiers and warriors were paid with coins and riches.

Because of their superior development, urban economies in the Mediterranean were able to attract migrant paid labor. When returning home, the migrant warriors carried coins and riches that would enable them to maximize the return that a homecoming entailed. Although difficult to prove whether these men were paid in advance or when discharged, it is an important issue as it shows the strength of one contractor over another and helps to better understand the construction of statehood in ancient and early medieval times.

This collection of papers sheds light on how coins, riches, and lands were gained and distributed among soldiers, warriors, and mercenaries. Contributions cover a wide chronological span from Late Pharaonic to early medieval times, linking a well-defined core area, the Mediterranean basin, with its peripheries: Central Europe and Scandinavia to the north and the margins of the Sahara Desert and the Fertile Crescent to the south and the east.

Examines how coins, riches and lands were gained and distributed among soldiers, warriors and mercenaries from Late Pharaonic to early medieval times around the Mediterranean basin and beyond.
Prologue: Not only coins
Fernando López Sįnchez, Marisa Bueno, and David Martķnez Chico
Part 1: Land and misthos in Classical Greece and the Hellenistic world
1. Financing and maintaining the Peloponnesian navy
Kenneth W. Harl
2. Arcadian and Achaean soldiers in the Elean War (c. 402400 BC)
Daniel Gómez Castro
3. Mercenary recruitment and settlement in Hellenistic Egypt: the failure of
the kleruchy system
John Serrati
4. Macedonian financial and strategic planning for the Third Macedonian War
Nicholas Sekunda
Part 2: Services rendered and payments due to imperial Roman soldiers
5. Roman soldiers and public works in Roman Egypt in the 1st2nd centuries
AD, according to Greek and Latin epigraphy: some examples
Sabino Perea Yébenes
6. What coins were the Roman soldiers carrying in battle? The numismatic
evidence from the military layer in the forum of colonia Ulpia Traiana
Sarmizegetusa (Roman Dacia)
Cristian Gzdac
7. La dispersione della moneta per la Siria in Occidente: solo ragioni
militari?
Michele Asolati
8. The Al-Salihiyah hoard of gold aurei and the Roman conquest of
Dura-Europos (c. AD 165)
David Martķnez Chico and Alberto Gonzįlez Garcķa
9. A military coinage? The case of Gordian III
Roger Bland
10. Satisfying soldiers and discharging emperors: the military propaganda of
the emperors Gallienus and Postumus through the Lugdunum/Colonia Claudia Ara
Agrippinensiums mint coinage
David Serrano Ordozgoiti
11. Ammianus Marcellinus on return to military service after discharge in the
4th-century AD Roman army
David Woods
12. The Roman ban on exports and the Late Roman army (AD 350450)
Alberto Gonzįlez Garcķa and David Martķnez Chico
Part 3: Foreign military contingents in Late Antique and early medieval
empires
13. Numismatic evidence of barbarian recruits between the 3rd century BC and
3rd century AD
Aleksander Bursche
14. The Roman army in Kuyavia, or the Barbarian-Roman brotherhood of arms
Bartosz Kontny
15. The Roman army of Gainas
Hugh Elton
16. The settlement of the Alani in Late Antique Gaul
Jeroen W.P. Wijnendaele and Guy Halsall
17. The recurring problem of Roman veterans in Migration period Scandinavia
Svante Fischer
18. Pseudo-imperial coins and pseudo-imperial armies
Fernando López Sįnchez
19. The employment of mercenaries during the Gothic War: AD 535553
Illas Ali Torrico
20. Landholding and military payment in the Arab conquest of Al-Andalus (AD
711756)
Marisa Bueno
Index
Fernando Lopez Sanchez is currently Lecturer at the Complutense University of Madrid. He is both an ancient historian and a numismatist interested in Greek, Roman and early medieval coinage. He has worked in several European universities and in different Numismatic Cabinets, among them in the British Museum and in the National Library of France. Marisa Bueno is Research Fellow at the Complutense University of Madrid. Her main research has focused on the study of cultural change derived from the processes of conquest, the Islamisation and its impact in the rural and urban spheres. David Martinez Chico is Margarita Salas Fellowship at the University of Valencia, where he completed a PhD in Archaeology. His scientific production is interdisciplinary in nature and includes international publications in numismatics, epigraphy, archaeology and archaeometry with the aim of studying the economy of the Roman world.