Papers by Dzmitry Huletski
Written sources of Ancient Rus’ record the developed monetary system of Pre-Mongol Rus’, consisti... more Written sources of Ancient Rus’ record the developed monetary system of Pre-Mongol Rus’, consisting of a clearly defined circle of ‘denominations’. At first, it’s grivna (гривна), nogata (ногата), kuna (куна), and veksha (векша). In documents of northern origin, rezana is also present. In the 12th century, when, according to the scholars, the development of commodity-money relations in Kievan Rus’ reached its highest peak, various types of grivnas — ‘of silver’, ‘of kunas’, ‘of sables’, and even ‘of dranitsy’ (драницы) (torn and worn skins) appeared.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Rus, Lithuania, Horde, v.14, 2024
The study of medieval artefacts of Ancient Rus’ has significantly intensified in the last decade,... more The study of medieval artefacts of Ancient Rus’ has significantly intensified in the last decade, having acquired a previously inaccessible technical instrumentary. Purely humanitarian, general (no matter how erudite) reflection on certain specimens known to researchers is no longer enough. Numismatics and sigillography are acquiring features of more «strict sciences», using scrupulous graphical reconstruction of stamps, restoring technological processes, studying the metrology of artefacts that are becoming available for research in increasing quantities, and applying mathematical models. Compared to coins, the study of medieval seals requires much greater intellectual and organizational effort from their researchers, which leads to a superficial level of our understanding of their functioning as a system. The authors of this article are aiming to start filling the gap. The type depicting St. Theodore (the Martyr), selected for the research, belongs to rather early examples of ancient Russian sigillography. In 1970, V.L. Yanin clarified the opinion of N.P. Likhachev, who first dated them, as a first approximation, to the 11th century. In the early 2010s, a hypothesis appeared that the seals with the image of St. Theodore the Martyr belong to Vseslav Bryachislavich of Połack (1044–1101) (Valeri V. Nechitaylo in 2012; Igor A. Zhukov in 2013). In the second half of the decade, several Belarusian, Russian and Ukrainian authors published numerous, previously unknown specimens of this type, primarily small monetary seals. In two articles, one of the authors of this publication formulated additional arguments in favour of attributing this type to Vseslav. In this work, authors collected all known stamp varieties of the described type, identified technological connections between them, and performed their graphic reconstruction.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Материалы и исследования по археологии Днепровского Левобережья, 2023
The study of monuments of monetary circulation of the Russian Middle Ages has significantly inten... more The study of monuments of monetary circulation of the Russian Middle Ages has significantly intensified in the last decade, having acquired a previously inaccessible technical base. Numismatics is acquiring the features of a more exact science, using the tools of scrupulous graphical reconstruction of stamps, restoring technological connections, studying the metrology of coins that are becoming available for research in increasing quantities, and applying mathematical models to the technical characteristics of ancient monuments. The article deals with the methodology of studying the monuments of numismatics and «small» sphragistics of Ancient Rus’.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Rus, Lithuania, Horde, 2023
The article introduces 47 lead blanks from the Ancient Rus period found in Druck (currently in th... more The article introduces 47 lead blanks from the Ancient Rus period found in Druck (currently in the Viciebsk region, Belarus). Small seals were produced of these blanks in the 11–12th centuries to fasten fur valuables into bundles, presumably circulating as a monetary unit (analogous to coins) there at that time.
New data triples the statistical base of such artefacts unearthed in Druck. The author distinguishes four groups of blanks according to their technological features and weight, considers contemporary analogies from other locations, and analyzes the genesis of the kind and technology development of the blanks. A hypothesis about what type of the Ancient Rus’ lead seals could have been produced in Druck was substantiated based on the mathematical analysis of the artefacts’ weight.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Русь, Литва, Орда, 2023
Речь в статье идет о свинцовых пломбах XII в., обнаруженных в ходе археологических рас- копок око... more Речь в статье идет о свинцовых пломбах XII в., обнаруженных в ходе археологических рас- копок около Нового замка в Гродно и впоследствии переданных на хранение в фонды Гродненского государственного историко-археологического музея. В общей сложности было найдено 85 пломб, их анализу и атрибуции и посвящена данная работа.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики. Том 13. Спецвыпуск «Русь Домонгольская», 2023
Тринадцатый том серии «Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики» является специал... more Тринадцатый том серии «Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики» является специальным выпуском, посвященным начальному периоду истории Древней Руси. Он включает в себя две научные статьи, в которых рассматривается обращение куфических дирхемов, а также три статьи по древнерусской сфрагистике. Сборник предназначен для историков, археологов, нумизматов, сфрагистов, музейных работников и коллекционеров, а также широкого круга читателей, интересующихся памятниками истории Восточной Европы в Средние века.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики. Вып. 12, 2023
Двенадцатый выпуск сборника серии «Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики» вклю... more Двенадцатый выпуск сборника серии «Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики» включает научные статьи, посвященные изучению монетного дела и денежного обращения трех крупных государств периода Средневековья, а также исследованию печатей и пломб XII—XVII вв. Публикуются клады монет и платежных слитков, редкие и неизданные типы монет и денежных клейм, а также работы, посвященные метрологическим и физико-химическим исследованиям нумизматических предметов.
Сборник предназначен для историков и археологов, нумизматов и сфрагистов, музейных работников и коллекционеров, а также для широкого круга читателей, интересующихся историческими памятниками периода Средневековья.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
СРЕДНЕВЕКОВАЯ НУМИЗМАТИКА ВОСТОЧНОЙ ЕВРОПЫ - ВЫПУСК 9, 2019
The article is devoted to a set of 31 ancient Russian lead seals dated the second half of the 11t... more The article is devoted to a set of 31 ancient Russian lead seals dated the second half of the 11th — mid-12 century. The collection was found in the Kursk region of the Russian Federation. All of the described artifacts of “small sphragistics” except for one specimen bear princely symbols of two generic groups:
• Images of the holy patrons of the princes and their fathers;
• Images of princely signs that were used to mark the property of the princes, including such seals.
In addition to the description and analysis of the set, the author also analyzes the criteria for dividing the artifacts of ancient Russian sigillography into two categories: documental seals and commercial seals.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Белорусский исторический обзор, 2020
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
РЛО, 2022
Сборник открывает статья В.П. Лебедева, Д.В. Гулецкого и Н.А. Дорошкевича о редком в своем топогр... more Сборник открывает статья В.П. Лебедева, Д.В. Гулецкого и Н.А. Дорошкевича о редком в своем топографическом контексте кладе куфических монет из Гродненской области Республики Беларусь. Находки кладов и отдельных экземпляров дирхемов VIII – начала ХI в. на территории Беларуси фиксируются с XIX в. Всего в четырех белорусских губерниях за это время было учтено 24 находки, из которых три – в Гродненской губернии, в том числе один клад, от которого сохранилась лишь одна монета Саманидов. В ХХ в. количество зафиксированных в печати и разных сводках белорусских кладов куфических монет составило 30 находок, среди них – три гродненских клада. В первое двадцатилетие XXI в. публикаций новых гродненских кладов куфических дирхемов пока не было, и предлагаемый депозит как раз таки открывает статистику их находок.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
РЛО, 2022
В одиннадцатый выпуск сборника серии «Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики» (... more В одиннадцатый выпуск сборника серии «Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики» (спецвыпуск «Русь Домонгольская») включены исследования в области прикладных исторических дисциплин, касающиеся обращения куфического дирхема в Восточной Европе; освещаются также малоизвестные факты о выпуске в отдельных областях Древней Руси местных монет и подражаний. Авторами серии продолжается фиксация материала для свода памятников «малой сфрагистики» – свинцовых пломб, служивших для скрепления меховых ценностей в XI–XII в. Сборник предназначен для историков, археологов, нумизматов, сфрагистов, а также прочих лиц, интересующихся вопросами геральдики, денежного обращения и права государств Восточной Европы в Средние века.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
KOINON The International Journal of Classical Numismatic Studies, 2020
Written sources of Ancient Rus’ record the developed monetary system of Pre-Mongol Rus’, consisti... more Written sources of Ancient Rus’ record the developed monetary system of Pre-Mongol Rus’, consisting of a clearly defined circle of ‘denominations’. At first, it’s grivna (гривна), nogata (ногата), kuna (куна), and veksha (векша). In documents of northern origin, rezana is also present. In the 12th century, when, according to the scholars, the development of commodity-money relations in Kievan Rus’ reached its highest peak, various types of grivnas — ‘of silver’, ‘of kunas’, ‘of sables’, and even ‘of dranitsy’ (драницы) (torn and worn skins) appeared.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Авторами анализируются данные, позволяющие сделать вывод о первом случае уверенной идентификации ... more Авторами анализируются данные, позволяющие сделать вывод о первом случае уверенной идентификации материальных свидетельств существования родоначальника династии полоцких князей — летописного варяга Рогволода, пребывавшего примерно с 962 до 978 года в Полоцке, где он был убит по приказу Владимира Святославича. Атрибутируемые Рогволоду I печати свидетельствуют о том, что князь был крещен под именем Василия.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Rus', Lithuania, Horde, v.10, 2022
In the spring of 2021, one of the authors of this article received information about the discover... more In the spring of 2021, one of the authors of this article received information about the discovery of a small deposit of the Grand Prince of Lithuania Vitovt’s coins near the village of Rognedin, Bryansk region of Russia. They were struck in Smolensk shortly after this city became part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the early 15th century. It consisted of 16 pennies with the image of the princely sign of Vitovt.
The local duke Yuri Svyatoslavich started the Smolenskian coinage about 1401, which was then continued by Vitovt after he captured the city. The weight of the Smolensk money was chosen according to the situation at the beginning of the 15th century – it almost exactly corresponded to the weight of coins of its powerful neighbors – the Vilna pennies of Jagiello and the Moscow half-dengas of Vasiliy Dmitrievitch.
Vitovt replaced the initials of Yuri Svyatoslavich with his own princely sign – Pillars. Coin masters who worked in Smolensk were noted for one of the highest levels of artistic quality in Rus’. The authors have compiled a die catalog of Smolensk coinage of Yuri Svyatoslavich and Vitovt, which includes 117 coins that form 36 die combinations.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Rus', Lithuania, Horde, v.10, 2022
A short message from Giedrius Bagdonas and Dzmitry Huletski is dedicated to a rare case of the La... more A short message from Giedrius Bagdonas and Dzmitry Huletski is dedicated to a rare case of the Latin legend containing a princely (pagan) name of a Lithuanian prince on a coin.
The coin of the type "Beast/Double Cross on the Shield" is one of the least studied. So far, both the Latin legend of the silver and the central image on its obverse have raised questions, but researchers have agreed that it was a coin minted during Jogaila's (better known as the King of Poland Wladyslaw Jagiello) reign. Today, more than 30 coins of this type are known. The first specimen was found in 1933 in the treasure of Mitkiškės (Elektrėnai municipality) but was described only in 1988. The coin represents the Vilna (Vilnius) city coinage of the Lithuanian prince Jogaila at the end of the 14th century. The noted name form IAGAL also finds its analogies on the well-known seal of the Dubissa treaty of 1382.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Rus', Lithuania, Horde, 2022
Basic principles of the monetary lead seals circulation in the first century of their existence i... more Basic principles of the monetary lead seals circulation in the first century of their existence in Kievan Rus’ – from ca 1050 to the time of Abu Hamid al-Gharnati's visit to Rus’ – have already been studied. The article introduces the new information about large finds of the monetary seals dated back to the late 12th century in two opposite parts of the former Połackian land – Losk and Druck. These sites are located approximately 250 km at the same latitude, both on the borders of Połackian land - one in the west, the other in the east. Our knowledge has been replenished with more than five hundred specimens.
Many finds of small seals from Druck have already been known and published before, but this finding is unique because an unprecedentedly large number of the sphragistic artifacts – 509 specimens – were recorded on a compact plot of land no larger than 1.5 by 1.5 meters during construction work within a private estate near the Druck settlement (at a distance of about 150-200 meters from it).
The pile of sphragistic artifacts has shown homogeneity: in contrast to the previously described local finds, the seals of the deposit have identical patina, degree of chemical preservation, and also a homogeneous typological composition. 84% belong to only four main groups of Połackian and Smolenskian seals of the second half of the 12th century – with two variants of the Połackian princely signs, with two close variants of bell-shaped signs of Monomakh heirs, and also with the Cyrillic legend on which the name “Volodar” is read on the best samples. We were lucky to encounter a kind of "sphragistic treasure" – a large warehouse of seals and objects that were once attached to them, within a single manor house. Probably, the treasure represented an instant slice of money circulation (storage of fur valuables) of the region in the second half of the 12th century or in the beginning of the 13th century. If all 509 seals once fastened the money bundles of the worn squirrel belts (the fiat kunas), the metal equivalent of the treasure was about 600 grams of silver.
In Losk, local historians were noting the findings of small seals discovered during agricultural work for several years in the late 2010-ies. They recorded these finds within the ancient "house spots" in the fields on both sides of the castle site. The total number of recorded items was 88 pieces. The composition of the Losk finds even more clearly points exclusively to the second half of the 12th/beginning of the 13th centuries. The information obtained will help to build a more accurate model of financial and trade relations in the Połackian principality at that time. So far, we can conclude that money circulation had a fairly similar structure in the two opposite parts of the economy.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики, выпуск 6, 2019
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
РЛО-6, 2019
В шестой выпуск сборника статей «Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики» вошли ... more В шестой выпуск сборника статей «Русь, Литва, Орда в памятниках нумизматики и сфрагистики» вошли материалы, посвященные денежному обращению указанных государств периода Средневековья, а также древнерусским актовым печатям и товарным пломбам. Освещаются проблемные вопросы атрибуции монет и печатей, публикуются монетные клады, исследуются группы и единичные экземпляры монет Руси, Золотой Орды и Великого княжества Литовского. Сборник предназначен для нумизматов, сфрагистов, историков, а также лиц, интересующихся вопросами нумизматики и сфрагистики IX-XVII вв.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Papers by Dzmitry Huletski
New data triples the statistical base of such artefacts unearthed in Druck. The author distinguishes four groups of blanks according to their technological features and weight, considers contemporary analogies from other locations, and analyzes the genesis of the kind and technology development of the blanks. A hypothesis about what type of the Ancient Rus’ lead seals could have been produced in Druck was substantiated based on the mathematical analysis of the artefacts’ weight.
Сборник предназначен для историков и археологов, нумизматов и сфрагистов, музейных работников и коллекционеров, а также для широкого круга читателей, интересующихся историческими памятниками периода Средневековья.
• Images of the holy patrons of the princes and their fathers;
• Images of princely signs that were used to mark the property of the princes, including such seals.
In addition to the description and analysis of the set, the author also analyzes the criteria for dividing the artifacts of ancient Russian sigillography into two categories: documental seals and commercial seals.
The local duke Yuri Svyatoslavich started the Smolenskian coinage about 1401, which was then continued by Vitovt after he captured the city. The weight of the Smolensk money was chosen according to the situation at the beginning of the 15th century – it almost exactly corresponded to the weight of coins of its powerful neighbors – the Vilna pennies of Jagiello and the Moscow half-dengas of Vasiliy Dmitrievitch.
Vitovt replaced the initials of Yuri Svyatoslavich with his own princely sign – Pillars. Coin masters who worked in Smolensk were noted for one of the highest levels of artistic quality in Rus’. The authors have compiled a die catalog of Smolensk coinage of Yuri Svyatoslavich and Vitovt, which includes 117 coins that form 36 die combinations.
The coin of the type "Beast/Double Cross on the Shield" is one of the least studied. So far, both the Latin legend of the silver and the central image on its obverse have raised questions, but researchers have agreed that it was a coin minted during Jogaila's (better known as the King of Poland Wladyslaw Jagiello) reign. Today, more than 30 coins of this type are known. The first specimen was found in 1933 in the treasure of Mitkiškės (Elektrėnai municipality) but was described only in 1988. The coin represents the Vilna (Vilnius) city coinage of the Lithuanian prince Jogaila at the end of the 14th century. The noted name form IAGAL also finds its analogies on the well-known seal of the Dubissa treaty of 1382.
Many finds of small seals from Druck have already been known and published before, but this finding is unique because an unprecedentedly large number of the sphragistic artifacts – 509 specimens – were recorded on a compact plot of land no larger than 1.5 by 1.5 meters during construction work within a private estate near the Druck settlement (at a distance of about 150-200 meters from it).
The pile of sphragistic artifacts has shown homogeneity: in contrast to the previously described local finds, the seals of the deposit have identical patina, degree of chemical preservation, and also a homogeneous typological composition. 84% belong to only four main groups of Połackian and Smolenskian seals of the second half of the 12th century – with two variants of the Połackian princely signs, with two close variants of bell-shaped signs of Monomakh heirs, and also with the Cyrillic legend on which the name “Volodar” is read on the best samples. We were lucky to encounter a kind of "sphragistic treasure" – a large warehouse of seals and objects that were once attached to them, within a single manor house. Probably, the treasure represented an instant slice of money circulation (storage of fur valuables) of the region in the second half of the 12th century or in the beginning of the 13th century. If all 509 seals once fastened the money bundles of the worn squirrel belts (the fiat kunas), the metal equivalent of the treasure was about 600 grams of silver.
In Losk, local historians were noting the findings of small seals discovered during agricultural work for several years in the late 2010-ies. They recorded these finds within the ancient "house spots" in the fields on both sides of the castle site. The total number of recorded items was 88 pieces. The composition of the Losk finds even more clearly points exclusively to the second half of the 12th/beginning of the 13th centuries. The information obtained will help to build a more accurate model of financial and trade relations in the Połackian principality at that time. So far, we can conclude that money circulation had a fairly similar structure in the two opposite parts of the economy.
New data triples the statistical base of such artefacts unearthed in Druck. The author distinguishes four groups of blanks according to their technological features and weight, considers contemporary analogies from other locations, and analyzes the genesis of the kind and technology development of the blanks. A hypothesis about what type of the Ancient Rus’ lead seals could have been produced in Druck was substantiated based on the mathematical analysis of the artefacts’ weight.
Сборник предназначен для историков и археологов, нумизматов и сфрагистов, музейных работников и коллекционеров, а также для широкого круга читателей, интересующихся историческими памятниками периода Средневековья.
• Images of the holy patrons of the princes and their fathers;
• Images of princely signs that were used to mark the property of the princes, including such seals.
In addition to the description and analysis of the set, the author also analyzes the criteria for dividing the artifacts of ancient Russian sigillography into two categories: documental seals and commercial seals.
The local duke Yuri Svyatoslavich started the Smolenskian coinage about 1401, which was then continued by Vitovt after he captured the city. The weight of the Smolensk money was chosen according to the situation at the beginning of the 15th century – it almost exactly corresponded to the weight of coins of its powerful neighbors – the Vilna pennies of Jagiello and the Moscow half-dengas of Vasiliy Dmitrievitch.
Vitovt replaced the initials of Yuri Svyatoslavich with his own princely sign – Pillars. Coin masters who worked in Smolensk were noted for one of the highest levels of artistic quality in Rus’. The authors have compiled a die catalog of Smolensk coinage of Yuri Svyatoslavich and Vitovt, which includes 117 coins that form 36 die combinations.
The coin of the type "Beast/Double Cross on the Shield" is one of the least studied. So far, both the Latin legend of the silver and the central image on its obverse have raised questions, but researchers have agreed that it was a coin minted during Jogaila's (better known as the King of Poland Wladyslaw Jagiello) reign. Today, more than 30 coins of this type are known. The first specimen was found in 1933 in the treasure of Mitkiškės (Elektrėnai municipality) but was described only in 1988. The coin represents the Vilna (Vilnius) city coinage of the Lithuanian prince Jogaila at the end of the 14th century. The noted name form IAGAL also finds its analogies on the well-known seal of the Dubissa treaty of 1382.
Many finds of small seals from Druck have already been known and published before, but this finding is unique because an unprecedentedly large number of the sphragistic artifacts – 509 specimens – were recorded on a compact plot of land no larger than 1.5 by 1.5 meters during construction work within a private estate near the Druck settlement (at a distance of about 150-200 meters from it).
The pile of sphragistic artifacts has shown homogeneity: in contrast to the previously described local finds, the seals of the deposit have identical patina, degree of chemical preservation, and also a homogeneous typological composition. 84% belong to only four main groups of Połackian and Smolenskian seals of the second half of the 12th century – with two variants of the Połackian princely signs, with two close variants of bell-shaped signs of Monomakh heirs, and also with the Cyrillic legend on which the name “Volodar” is read on the best samples. We were lucky to encounter a kind of "sphragistic treasure" – a large warehouse of seals and objects that were once attached to them, within a single manor house. Probably, the treasure represented an instant slice of money circulation (storage of fur valuables) of the region in the second half of the 12th century or in the beginning of the 13th century. If all 509 seals once fastened the money bundles of the worn squirrel belts (the fiat kunas), the metal equivalent of the treasure was about 600 grams of silver.
In Losk, local historians were noting the findings of small seals discovered during agricultural work for several years in the late 2010-ies. They recorded these finds within the ancient "house spots" in the fields on both sides of the castle site. The total number of recorded items was 88 pieces. The composition of the Losk finds even more clearly points exclusively to the second half of the 12th/beginning of the 13th centuries. The information obtained will help to build a more accurate model of financial and trade relations in the Połackian principality at that time. So far, we can conclude that money circulation had a fairly similar structure in the two opposite parts of the economy.
two centuries. This book considers Jochid numismatics during the time that they were under the authority of the Great Khan in Karakorum (1224-1266).
Indeed, the cost of counterstamping an old, void-of-guarantee coinage is significantly below the cost of producing a new currency. However, the countermarks do not contribute to the political prestige of the issuer, as their owned issued money would have done, and, perhaps more importantly, such money cannot be used in international trade, since their exchange rate is guaranteed only within the state issuing them. Lithuanian countermarks circulated exclusively in areas of the Lithuanian-Horde frontier, almost without any penetration into the interior of the state.
Indeed, the cost of counterstamping an old, void-of-guarantee coinage is significantly below the cost of producing a new currency. However, the countermarks do not contribute to the political prestige of the issuer, as their owned issued money would have done, and, perhaps more importantly, such money cannot become be used in international trade, since their exchange rate is guaranteed only within the state issuing them. Lithuanian countermarks circulated exclusively in areas of the
Lithuanian-Horde frontier, almost without any penetration into the interior of the state.
The Lithuanian half-groats of Alexander became the first nation-wide currency in Grand Duchy of Lithuania at the end of the 15th century. Prior to that the individual regions of the country had different coins in circulation. The central regions of the state in the third quarter of 14th century began minting the Lithuanian small groats that initially emerged as a half fraction of the base currency of the Eastern Europe of the late Middle Ages — the Prague groat. With time, as a result of the depreciation, this kind of coins degraded into a lower denomination — a penny, which was in circulation mainly in the north-west of the country. The southern and eastern regions saw the emergence of their own coinage that oriented itself towards the monetary systems of the neighbours — Poland and the Golden Horde. Even at the end of the 15th century, in addition to Prague groats, countermarked Eastern (Crimean and Jujid) coins were also in circulation in the southern territories. A common tender was also the silver rouble bullions.
Seeking to supply the state with money for the war with the Duchy of Moscow, in 1495 Alexander Jagiellon pushed through a currency reform. The monetary system was simple: it was projected to mint two currency units — the penny and the half-groat. The countable unit was the groat, which consisted of 10 pence. This decimal system was the only one in Europe at that time. Lithuanian half-groats penetrated the Polish market since their value was 20 per cent higher than that of the Polish ones.
Lithuanian half-groats of Alexander Jagiellon – the oldest Lithuanian coins with the inscription including the name of the state – with the legends MONETA ALEXANDRI (coin of Alexander in Latin) on obverse and MAGNI DVCIS LITVANIE (the Grand Duke of Lithuania in Latin) on reverse were minted from 1495 to 1506. Lithuanian half-groats of Sigismund I the Old – the first dated Lithuanian coins – with the legends MONETA SIGISMVNDI ( coin of Sigismund in Latin) and date on obverse and MAGNI DVCIS LITVANIE ( the Grand Duke of Lithuania in Latin) on reverse were minted from 1508 to 1529 in Vilna mint. The total quantity of coins issued was estimated as approximately 15-20 million half-groats in times of Alexander and approximately 25-30 million half-groats in times of Sigismund (Remecas 2002, pages 58-77). Lithuanian half-groat has a diameter of 20-22 millimeters (18-20.5 millimeters from 1509), weighed 0.90-1.46 g (but the eхample of even 2.36 g weight is also known), silver fineness 6/16.
The fundamentals of classification of the half-groats of Alexander and Sigismund the Old by type were laid in the works of D. Huletski (2006) and A. Hramyka (2008). These classifications are, with minor adjustments, the foundation of this catalogue.
В книгу вошёл значительный массив платёжных слитков, игравших ключевую роль в русском денежном обращении XII-XV столетий. До настоящего времени информация об этих необычных памятниках нумизматики была разобщена и труднодоступна массовому читателю. Заметно расширена классификация подражаний и надчеканов, выпускавшихся в русских княжествах, исследованы их основы.
Переработана компоновка страниц для повышения удобства читателя, изображения монет размещены над описанием. Значительная часть прорисовок и черно-белых изображений заменена цветными фотографиями. В научный оборот вводится большое количество новых монет.
Формат А4, твердая обложка, 660 страниц, Москва, 2017 г. Тираж: 500 экз.
вв., обнаруженные на территории Древней Руси. Том будет интересен сфрагистам, нумизматам, историкам, археологам, коллекционерам и всем, кто интересуется политическим, дипломатическим и экономическим прошлым средневековой Руси.
свящён домонгольскому периоду истории Руси и её соседей (X – начало XIII вв.) В том традиционно включены статьи по нумизматике и сфрагистике, а также по геральдике и архитектуре.
==========================
The end of the first millennium was marked in Kievan Rus’ by the beginning of abundant coinage. “Srebreniks” and “zlatniks” of Vladimir Svyatoslavich were considered for a long time to be the first Russian currency. Confidence in this fact was recently shaken by new investigations of peculiar Russian Kufic dirham imitations that first appeared in the middle of the 10th century. After the death of Vladimir in Kiev (1015), silver coins continued to be issued by his successor Svyatopolk (who ruled until 1019). This duke was soon defeated and expelled from the throne by his brother Yaroslav, who did not resume the mintage of “srebreniks”.
What replaced these coins? How was small-scale trade carried out in the lands that never used “srebreniks” (for example, Polotsk)? Was it satisfied only with natural exchange? Insufficient knowledge of Russian monetary circulation in the 11th through the beginning of the 13th centuries is primarily due to the scarcity of historical sources.
The book is written in a mixed genre. It is based on the research of Dzmitry Huletski, located at the junction of two auxiliary historical disciplines – numismatics and sigillography. Several years ago he started his research of unusual ancient artifacts – small medieval Russian lead seals. In spite of the fact that more than one and a half centuries have passed since their first recognition by Count K.P. Tyszkiewicz, no one has been able to explain their phenomenon sufficiently.
In the first part of the book we worked with medieval Russian written sources, comparing them with data from archeology and numismatics, studied the historiography of monetary systems of the pre-Mongol period of Russian history and developed our own vision of this problem. Monuments of the legal thought of Ancient Rus’ – the “Rus’ Justice”, princely statutes, international treaties – do not shed enough light on money circulation in ancient Rus’. They allow us to trace its features only in general outlines and in the individual territories of Novgorod and Smolensk. The Novgorod monetary system can be characterized somewhat more fully because of the significant number of contemporary birchbark letters found there. We can only use analogies to talk about how the markets of the remaining lands functioned.
As the majority of modern researchers, we adopt the idea of circulation of fur money in the 11th-13th centuries in Rus’. It would be impossible to prove this without reliance on the testimonies of outstanding foreigners who visited Russia in the Middle Ages or heard about its customs from eyewitnesses. A second part of the book is devoted to a review of their rather sparse allusions. Roger Bacon directly compared Russian fur money with contemporary Chinese paper notes. It forced us to pay attention to the latter and learn the circumstances of their emergence and functioning. The third section is devoted to the financial side of the issue of fur valuables, after which the history of the appearance of small seals from lead is briefly considered.
The interrelation between the “kuna” of written sources (one of two main currency units of this time in Rus’) and medieval Russian lead seals, which now seems obvious to us, has determined the subject of the voluminous fourth section. It is dedicated to the historiography of the Russian “small sigillography”. Here all important studies, beginning from 1864, are mentioned.
Finally, the fifth part is a catalog of small medieval Russian l lead seals containing 69 types and a number of their subtypes. It was compiled on the basis of eight publications of Dzmitry Huletski with co-authors and collaborators published from 2016-2018, in which he introduced more than 1,000 new finds of small seals. This catalog is far from being complete yet. The publication of many more thousands of seals will probably be required to complete the study of their emission in the pre-Mongol period. We hope this work will be an intermediate milestone that sums up our three-year study, but we don’t plan to stop here. In the sixth section we discuss several topics that, in our opinion, stand among the most promising directions for the research in Russian sigillography in the immediate future.
While preserving a scientific style in the main text of the book, we also devoted additional efforts to a selection of illustrative series, as well as to the creation of a reference tool that would help an inexperienced reader to navigate through the “pantheon” of medieval Russian historical personalities. Thus, the choice was made in favor of the popular scientific format of the publication. Images of the coins and seals are presented in this book in a 1.5x magnification.
In conclusion, we would like to thank the following people for the help we received during the preparation of this book: Igor Zhukov, Yury Tiguntsev, Sergey Polekhov, Sergey Goglov, Vyacheslav Kuleshov, Maxim Vorontsov, Petr Gaydukov, Vasily Zaitsev, Sergey Sidorovich, Andrey Shkapov (Russia), Alexander Krivoruchko, Igor Pilatovich (Belarus), Nikolay Yaroshevski, Volodymyr Mukhin (Ukraine), Werner Seibt (Austria), Dirk Faltin (Switzerland), Marcin Piotrowski (Poland), Alistair McKay (Great Britain) and James Farr (USA). The book would be much less comprehensive without your expertise and a keen interest in medieval history.
В статье рассматривается роль палеографии, сфрагистики и генеалогии в изучении процессов становления государства и права в Полоцком княжестве X в. Сделаны переводы норвежских источников, имеющих отношение к Рогволоду, представлен каталог вислых актовых печатей, которые могут быть отнесены к Рогволоду, дано палеографическое обоснование их атрибуции.
Ключевые слова: Рогволод, Рогнеда, Хокун, Полоцк, печати, акты, генеалогия, палеография, сфрагистика, археология, Норвегия, викинги
NO
Jeg anbefaler min artikkel publisert i samarbeid med Huletski om den norske Ragnvald AKA Rogvolod fra 900-tallet. Leseren bør ha kunnskap om akademisk russisk litteratur, i tillegg til norsk bokmål og nynorsk fra 1930-tallet, evne til å oversette skaldisk poesi og sagaer. Du bør også ha kunnskap om slavisk sfragistikk og om Vestlandet i vikingtiden. Det vil absolutt være interessant for deg å lese artikkelen om Ragnvalds to sigiller og Polatsk