This edited collection analyses the phenomenon of coin use for religious and ritual purposes in different cultures and across different periods of time. It proposes an engagement with the theory and interpretation of the ‘material turn’ with numismatic evidence, and an evidence-based series of discussions to offer a fuller, richer and fresh account of coin use in ritual contexts. No extensive publication has previously foregrounded coins in such a model, despite the fact that coins constitute an integrated part of the material culture of most societies today and of many in the past. Here, interdisciplinary discussions are organised around three themes: coin deposit and ritual practice, the coin as economic object and divine mediator, and the value and meaning of coin offering. Although focusing on the medieval period in Western Europe, the book includes instructive cases from the Roman period until today. The collection brings together well-established and emerging scholars from archaeology, art history, ethnology, history and numismatics, and great weight is given to material evidence which can complement and contradict the scarce written sources.
Introduction: Faith and Ritual Materialised: Coin Finds in Religious
Contexts Nanouschka Myrberg Burström Part I: Money in Rituals and Practice
1.
Death by Deposition?: Coins and Ritual in the Late Iron Age and Early Roman
Transition in Northern Gaul David Wigg-Wolf
2. The Impact of Coinage on
Ritual Offerings During the Late Iron Age (c. 25025/15 BC) Michael Nick
3.
Coins and Baptism in Late Antiquity: Written Sources and Numismatic Evidence
Reconsidered Claudia Perassi
4. Pilgrims, Pennies and the Ploughzone: Folded
Coins in Medieval Britain Richard Kelleher
5. Why Money Does Grow on Trees:
The British Coin-Tree Custom Ceri Houlbrook Part II: Coins as Secular and
Sacred Objects
6. Coins as Non-Coins: The Use and Meaning of Roman Coins in
Religious Contexts Outside the Empire Helle W. Horsnæs
7. Firmly I Believe
and Truly: Religious Iconography on Early Anglo-Saxon Coins Anna Gannon
8.
Pecuniary Profanities?: Money, Christianity and Demonstrative Giving in the
Early Middle Ages Rory Naismith
9. Coins and the Church in Medieval England:
Votive and Economic Functions of Money in Religious Contexts Martin Allen
10.
Sacra Moneta: Divinity, Purity, Miracles and Powers Lucia Travaini Part III:
The Value and Worth of Offering
11. Worthless?: The Practice of Depositing
Counterfeit Coins in Roman Votive Contexts Fleur Kemmers
12. Scandinavian
Women in Search of Salvation: Womens Use of Money in Religion and Devotional
Practice Svein H. Gullbekk
13. A Cheap Salvation?: Post-Reformation Offerings
in Finnish Churches Frida Ehrnsten
Nanouschka Myrberg Burström is Reader in Archaeology in the Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies at Stockholm University.
Gitte Tarnow Ingvardson is Curator of the Coin Cabinet at the Historical Museum, Lund University, and a PhD fellow at the Bornholm Museum and Copenhagen University.