Ursula Kampmann also published a review of an important new work on Byzantine coinage in the February 19, 2015 issue of
CoinsWeekly. Here's an excerpt. Be sure to read the complete version online. -Editor
Franz
Füeg, Corpus of the Nomismata from Basil II to Eudacia 976-1067. Classical Numismatic Group, Lancaster (Pennsylvania) / London, 2014. 161 p.,
21,3 x 29,7 cm, figures and graphics in black and white, Hardcover. CD-ROM attached. ISBN: 978-0-9898254-9-8. $125
Franz Füeg is one of the most meticulous researchers currently working on the Byzantine coinage. His new opus commands deep respect from every
reader, acknowledging the care with which the author has treated the relevant material. With this impressive publication Franz Füeg provides a die
corpus for the nomismata from 976 to 1067 that accesses not only the objects in museums collections but all specimens sold in auction sales as
well.
The diligence and the analytic intellect that are necessary to finish such a well-wrought work have to be admired in themselves. Together with his
first book that dealt with the nomismata coinage from 713 to 976 (the addenda to which are part of this volume), Franz Füeg has exhaustively
researched the Byzantine gold coinage except for the semisses and tremisses of the 8th and 9th centuries.
Let’s face it: anyone writing an auction sale catalog and being in a hurry to find a reference on a coin will be out of sorts with Franz Füeg. It
does take some time to identify the exact coin in his work, which makes every reader realize how complex the Byzantine coinage really is – despite
the fact that the author has come up with good ideas to keep the actual catalog as lean as possible. He split it into the printed book with the die
variants and their descriptions and the actual catalog containing all the accessed specimens – not in a printed format but on an CD-ROM that comes
with it.
The most important element to dealers and collectors, however, is Füeg’s thorough list of forgeries he had come to know (an alarming number, by
the way). Thanks to his extensive die study he was able to identify several objects as forgeries that could not have been detected with conventional
techniques. If only one single forgery is not being bought after checking with the new Füeg then the book is already worth its prize!
The publication of Franz Füeg is a catalog that will still be a reference work in 100 years’ time. For his first volume the Académie des
Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres of the Institut de France awarded him the Prix DUCHALAIS in 2010. We are curious about how many prizes this second
volume is going to win. We would award him a prize right away if we had one to give.
To read the complete article, see:
The Corpus of the Nomismata, 976-1067 (www.coinsweekly.com/en/News/4?&id=3273)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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