Silver, butter, cloth

Titel: Silver, butter, cloth : monetary and social economies in the Viking age / edited by Jane Kershaw and Gareth Williams ; consultant editors Søren Sindbæk and James Graham-Campbell
Beteiligt: ; ; ;
Veröffentlicht: Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2018
Umfang: xvi, 306 Seiten : Illustrationen, Tabellen, Karten ; 25 cm
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
Medieval history and archaeology
RVK-Notation:
Schlagworte:
Andere Ausgaben: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe: Silver, butter, cloth. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2019. - 1 Online-Ressource (xvi, 306 Seiten)
ISBN: 9780198827986

Silver, Butter, Cloth advances current debates about the nature and complexity of Viking economic systems. It explores how silver and other commodities were used in monetary and social economies across the Scandinavian world of the Viking Age (c. 800-1100 AD) before and alongside the wide scale introduction of coinage. Taking a multi-disciplinary approach that unites archaeological, numismatic, and metallurgical analyses, Kershaw and Williams examine the uses and sources of silver in both monetary and social transactions, addressing topics such as silver fragmentation, hoarding, and coin production and re-use. Uniquely, it also goes beyond silver, giving the first detailed consideration of the monetary role of butter, cloth, and gold in the Viking economy. Indeed, it is instrumental in developing methodologies to identify such commodity monies in the archaeological record. The use of silver and other commodities within Viking economies is a dynamic field of study, fuelled by important recent discoveries across the Viking world. The 14 contributions to this book, by a truly international group of scholars, draw on newly available archaeological data from eastern Europe, Scandinavia, the North Atlantic, and the British Isles and Ireland, to present the latest original research. Together, they deepen understanding of Viking monetary and social economies and advance new definitions of "economy", "currency", and "value" in the ninth to eleventh centuries.