Here are some additional items in the media this week that may be of interest.
-Editor
Pre-Colonial African Coins
Arthur Shippee passed along this article about pre-colonial African coins. Thanks.
-Editor
The Aksumite of Northern Ethiopian are the early tribes of Africa to introduce coins in the 2nd to the 9th century as a means of trading. These coins were made of gold, a little bronze and a minute quantity of silver.
The Aksumite kings initially decreed the coins should bear Greek inscriptions, but, was later amended and Amharic text was embossed on the coins, according to Britannica.
The traditional coins which were used by the Ethiopians temporarily went into extinction as a result of foreign alliances and allegiance.
King Menelick, emperor of Ethiopia between 1889 and 1913, restored the coins but rather as silvers with an embossment of the Lion of Judah. He believed he was the direct descendant of King Solomon and Queen Sheba.
The Ethiopians were not the only African nations to have started using coins as means of transaction before the arrival of the Europeans.
To read the complete article, see:
Coins used by African nations before colonialism and post-independence
(https://face2faceafrica.com/article/coins-used-by-african-nations-before-colonialism-and-post-independence)
Dallas Police Challenge Coin Investigated
A common theme in the news seems to be challenge coins with controversial designs.
-Editor
KDFW
Dallas Police Department investigating 'racist' challenge coin rendering
August 31, 2022
The Dallas Police Department said it is investigating a so-called challenge coin made by a white officer that the head of the Dallas Black Police Association called "racist."
To watch the complete news report, see:
Dallas Police Department investigating 'racist' challenge coin rendering
(https://news.yahoo.com/dallas-police-department-investigating-racist-221401131.html)
To read an earlier E-Sylum article, see:
LOOSE CHANGE: JUNE 12, 2022 : Creator of Offensive Maryland Challenge Coin Identified
(https://www.coinbooks.org/v25/esylum_v25n24a32.html)
Swimmer's Artistic Pose with her Medals
An Olympic swimmer generated a great deal of comment with an artsy photo with her medals.
-Editor
Olympics swimmer Linda Cerruti has hit back at sexist comments on a photo where she's posing upside down with her medals from the European Aquatics Championships.
The photo in question, which was posted by the Italian swimmer last week, showed her posing in an acrobatic upside-down pose along with the eight medals she won at the championships in Rome.
The post, which has received tens of thousands of interactions and many messages of support, shows the medals draped along Cerruti's legs as she does the splits.
However, two days after sharing the picture the swimmer posted a follow-up message explaining that she's received thousands of sexist and vulgar comments beneath the image.
Two days ago I shared a photo taken at the beach where I always go, where I developed my first dreams, a place that has great symbolic value for me, she wrote. The photo shows me in an artistic pose, typical of my sport, upside down and doing the splits along with the eight medals I won during the best European Championship of my career."
To read the complete article, see:
Olympic swimmer responds to ‘sexist' comments on her ‘upside down' medal photo
(https://ca.sports.yahoo.com/news/olympic-swimmer-responds-sexist-comments-045349294.html)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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