

Ground-plan of the 2nd Floor of the Iliou Melathron
(Press to tour the rooms or the 1st and 2nd floors)

  
3D Virual reality objects
Virtual touch of
selectively objects of the exhibition |

Coinage in the Western and Eastern Medieval World
In the 5th century AD the Peoples of the Great Raids issued coinage
following the Late Roman and Byzantine prototypes. In the mid-8th
century the basis of the European numismatic system was set which,
until the 12th century, was dominated by the use of silver. From the
13th century, the fixed structure of the new European states, the
development of trade networks and the internationalisation of
transactions contributed in a mutually accepted numismatic system,
where gold and silver coinages of the Italian cities were prevalent.
In Greece, during the same period, coins of the Frankish states were
produced and circulated.
In the 7th century BC in the East, the first Arab coins succeeded the
silver coinage of the Persian kingdom of the Sasanians. In the
beginning, the Arabs would adopt Sasanian and Byzantine prototypes but
soon their coins bore no more images but inscriptions of religious and
political content. Since the mid- 8th century, caliphates and small
states minted gold, silver and copper coins in accordance with an
almost uniform numismatic system adapted to trade activities in the
Eastern world.
      
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