513 resultados para Coins, Byzantine.
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No more published after I. Teil.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Reprint of 1870 ed.
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Includes errata.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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1. Monnaie épiscopale, sous le Mérovingiens, seule monnaie d'or légitime d'un evêque français.
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Goldsmiths'-Kress no. 10681.
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Atlas has title: L'aes grave, cioe, le monete italiche primitive del Museo Krocheiano, desegnate in pietra sotto la direzione di P.T. da Girolamo Apollonj, pittore romano negli anni MDCCCXXXVII e MDCCCXXXVIII.
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Title vignette, engraved.
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"Statuts de la Société ... adoptes ... 18 octobre 1890, à Genève" (8, 8 p.; in French and German) inserted at end of v. 9 (1890)
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"Tom I, Vypusk I." No more published?
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To v. 4 is prefixed: German, Austrian and Swiss measures, weights and coins ... Bearb. von Dr. Hubert Jansen (xlviii p.)
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Title on spine: Romans grecs.
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Prefixed to v. 4: German, Austrian, and Swiss measures, weights, coins ... Bearb. von dr. Hubert Jansen (xlvii p.)
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The ability to make rapid measurements on small samples using laser fluorination enhances the potential of oxygen isotopes in the investigation of early inorganic materials and technologies. delta O-18 and Sr-87/Sr-86 values are presented for glass from two primary production sites, four secondary production sites and a consumer site in the Near East, dating from Late Antiquity to the medieval period. delta O-18 is in general slightly less effective than Sr-87/Sr-86 in discriminating between sources, as the spread of measured values from a single source is somewhat broader relative to the available range. However, while Sr-87/Sr-86 is derived predominantly from either the lime-bearing fraction of the glass-making sand or the plant ash used as a source of alkali, delta O-18 derives mainly from the silica. Thus the two measurements can provide complementary information. A comparison of delta O-18 for late Roman - Islamic glasses made on the coast of Syria-Palestine with those of previously analysed glasses from Roman Europe suggests that the European glasses are relatively enriched in O-18. This appears to contradict the view that most Roman glass was made using Levantine sand and possible interpretations are discussed.