Publication: Carthaginiancoinfinds: una base de datos sobre hallazgos numismáticos geolocalizados.
Authors
Fumadó Ortega, Iván
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Publisher
Revista Numismática Hécate
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DOI
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Las monedas acuñadas bajo la autoridad del Estado cartaginés han gozado
tradicionalmente de una visibilidad reducida en comparación con las de otras entidades
emisoras. Aunque esto se explica por obvios motivos históricos, también hay factores
historiográficos y epigráficos que han contribuido a que, hasta la fecha, este numerario sea poco
conocido. Esta circunstancia también ha provocado que no se haya dedicado la debida atención
al análisis del uso de la moneda por parte de la sociedad cartaginesa. Las Digital Humanities
ofrecen hoy herramientas que permiten intervenir y paliar la gran dispersión que sufre
actualmente la información relativa al fenómeno monetario cartaginés. En este artículo se
presenta una de ellas: una base de datos on-line que centraliza, normaliza, geolocaliza y
visibiliza la documentación ya publicada sobre hallazgos de moneda griega en Cartago (Túnez).
Coins minted under the authority of the Carthaginian State have traditionally had a minor visibility compared to other issues. Although obvious historical reasons could be argued to explain it, historiographical and epigraphical factors have also contributed to the fact that Carthaginian coinage is still poorly known. This has also led to a lack of attention on how coins were used by the Carthaginian society. The Digital Humanities offer tools that allow us to contribute and mitigate the great dispersion that the information on the Carthaginian numismatic phenomenon currently suffers. This paper presents a contribution of that sort: an on-line database that centralizes, standardizes, geolocates and makes more visible the documentation already published on Greek coin finds in Carthage (Tunisia).
Coins minted under the authority of the Carthaginian State have traditionally had a minor visibility compared to other issues. Although obvious historical reasons could be argued to explain it, historiographical and epigraphical factors have also contributed to the fact that Carthaginian coinage is still poorly known. This has also led to a lack of attention on how coins were used by the Carthaginian society. The Digital Humanities offer tools that allow us to contribute and mitigate the great dispersion that the information on the Carthaginian numismatic phenomenon currently suffers. This paper presents a contribution of that sort: an on-line database that centralizes, standardizes, geolocates and makes more visible the documentation already published on Greek coin finds in Carthage (Tunisia).
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