Silver Economies, Monetisation and Society in Scandinavia AD 800-1100
Gareth Williams author Gareth Williams editor James Graham-Campbell editor Søren Michael Sindbæk editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Aarhus University Press
Published:18th Nov '11
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The Viking Age was a period of great economic complexity and experimentation in Scandinavia. By the end of the period, an ancient 'display' economy, based on ornaments of precious metal, had been largely replaced by counted money and national coinages. But this development was neither simple nor linear: for much of the Viking Age, several silver economies co-existed and interacted. The role of silver in Viking-age society and economy has recently developed into an exciting interdisciplinary topic for research. New evidence raises debates on the nature of valuables, bullion, monetisation, commodity money, and early urban trade. This book brings together an international group of archaeologists, historians and numismatists to draw a balance sheet of current research. Based on a symposium held in Aarhus, Denmark, in 2008, it provides a structured basis for comparison, combining regional overviews with case-studies of significant sites or hoards. The book is dedicated to Dr Mark Blackburn (1953-2011) in recognition of his outstanding contribution to Viking-age numismatics and monetary history.
"...the development of silver, and other, economies in Viking Age Scandinavia is a wideranging and conceptually rich subject area, with great potential for future research. This volume makes a major contribution to its study." - Jane Kershaw, University of Oxford, Early Medieval Europe 2013 21 (2)
ISBN: 9788779345850
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
380 pages