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EARLY ANGLO-SAXON
a) Gold Imports etcb) The Sceatta Coinage 675 - c.760 AD.
BNJ ReferencesThrymsas and ‘Sceattas’ (c. 600-750) - General P. Le Gentilhomme, ‘The circulation of sceats in Merovingian Gaul’, 24 (1941-44), 195-210, 2 pls. P. V. Hill, ‘Saxon sceattas and their problems’, 26 (1949-51), 129-54, 5 pls. P. V. Hill, ‘The “standard” and “London” series of Anglo-Saxon sceattas’, 26 (1949-51), 251-79, 4 pls. P. V. Hill, ‘The animal, “Anglo-Merovingian” and miscellaneous series of Anglo-Saxon sceattas’, 27 (1952- 54), 1-38, 5 pls. S. E. Rigold, ‘The two primary series of sceattas’, 30 (1960-61), 6-53, 3 pls.; 35 (1966), 1-6, pl. P. Grierson, ‘The authenticity of the York “thrymsas”‘, 31 (1962), 8-10 D. M. Metcalf and D. R. Walker, ‘The “wolf” sceattas’, 36 (1967), 11-28, pl. D. M. Metcalf and L. K. Hamblin, ‘A modern forgery of a sceat’, 37 (1968), 190-91 M. Morehart, ‘Some dangers of dating sceattas by typological sequences’, 39 (1970), 1-5 S. E. Rigold, ‘The principal series of English sceattas’, 47 (1977), 21-30 D. M. Metcalf, ‘Another modern forgery of a sceat’, 48 (1978), 107 M. J. Morehart, ‘Female centaur or sphinx?: on naming sceat types: the case of BMC type 47’, 55 (1985), 1-9
D. M. Metcalf, ‘A sceat of series K minted by Archbishop Berhtwald of Canterbury (693-731)’, 58 (1988), 124-26, G. Williams, ‘The gold coinage of Eadbald, King of Kent (AD 616-40)’, 68 (1998), 137-40, pl. D. M. Metcalf, ‘Determining the mint-attribution of East Anglian sceattas through regression analysis’, 70 (2000), 1-11 D. M. Metcalf, ‘“As easy as A, B, C”: the mint-places of early sceatta types in the South-east’, 71 (2001), 34-48 D. M. Metcalf, Monetary circulation in England, c.675-c.710: the distribution patterns of series A, B and C – and F’, 74 (2004), 1-19 D. M. Metcalf, ‘The first series of sceattas minted in southern Wessex: series W’, 75 (2005), 1-17 J. Naylor, ‘Mercian hegemony and the origins of series J sceattas: the case for Lindsey’, 76 (2006), 159-70 D. M. Metcalf, ‘Runic sceattas reading epa, types R1 and R2’, 77 (2007), 49-70 D. M. Metcalf, ‘The archbishop’s hat. A suggested attribution for the sceattas of series F’, 84 (2014), 52-71. Thrymsas and ‘Sceattas’ - Finds R. A. G. Carson, ‘Two interesting site finds: 1. Anglo-Saxon sceatta’, 33 (1964), 171 L. V. Grinsell, ‘A sceatta from Portishead, Somerset’, 39 (1970), 163-64 D. M. Metcalf, ‘Sceattas found at the Iron-Age hill fort of Walbury Camp, Berkshire’, 44 (1974), 1-12, 2 pls. D. M. Metcalf, ‘Twelve notes on sceatta finds’, 46 (1976), 1-18, pl. S. E. Rigold and D. M. Metcalf, ‘A check-list of English finds of sceattas’, 47 (1977), 31-52, 3 pls.; 48 (1978), 107 S. E. Rigold, ‘A group of three sceattas from excavations at Mucking, Essex’, 47 (1977), 127-28 D. M. Metcalf, ‘Some finds of thrymsas and sceattas in England’, 56 (1986), 1-15 J. A. Newman, ‘The true provenance of the Woodbridge sceatta “hoard”‘, 65 (1995), 217-18 L. Laing and M. Ponting, ‘An unpublished early penny from Lincolnshire and its significance’, 72 (2002), 164-67, pl.
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