The CCCRH collection is largely comprised of coins, medals, medallions and tokens, but we also have a large number of manuscripts and other items, including icons, figurines and weapons. We welcome opportunities to make items from our collection available to churches, schools, mosques and other community groups.
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Three new articles posted
Three recent articles by CCCRH Research Associate, Dr Peter Lewis, in the Australasian Coin and Banknote magazine have been added to the CCCRH webste: September – A Medallion of St Catherine of AlexandriaAugust – Worn CoinsJuly – An Interesting Family – Carus and his Sons
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MK Berlin fully linked to Antigonid Coins Online
Online tools for numismatic research just keep getting better. Now Karsten Dahmen at the Münzkabinett Berlin has fully catalogued all of their coins of Demetrius Poliorcetes with the newly-published URIs from Antigonid Coins Online, which is based on Edward T. Newell’s 1927 corpus. There are 119 in total from Berlin, accompanying more than 400 coins
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Corpus Nummorum Online
Corpus Nummorum Online is a web portal devoted to the ancient coins of lower Moesia, Thrace, Mysia and the Troad. This is a pilot project for assembling ancient Greek coinage by region and mint for the various purposes of research and cultural heritage preservation. The research database is based primarily on Berlin collections, which include
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126 BnF coins integrated into Antigonid Coins Online
One hundred twenty-six coins from the Bibliothèque nationale de France, recently cataloged by Julien Olivier, have been incorporated into the newly-released Antigonid Coins Online (AGCO), which so far includes the coinage of Demetrius Poliorcetes. Roughly a dozen of these coins were already accessible through AGCO upon its launch since a handful of the coins of
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CCCRH Online
We are preparing to move our database of coins and other artefacts online and you can get a sneak preview here: https://airtable.com/shrbM1cR4DQEGZNtB
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Seleucid Monograms published to SCO
Ethan Gruber, the Web Services Developer for the American Numismatic Society, has published around 1,300 monograms appearing on the coinage of Seleucus I through Antiochus III (Houghton, Lorber, and Hoover’s Seleucid Coins, Part 1) to the Seleucid Coins Online (SCO) project. These monograms are linked to thousands of types and subtypes. According to Gruber, where the
