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Source Description
Byzantine Gold Coins The vast number of surviving Byzantine coins attests to the level of trade across the empire. Controlled and supervised by the emperor, the producers of coins took care to represent his authority and reflect his stature. Talented artists were recruited to engrave the dies (molds) used for the striking of coins. Emperors increasingly came to include their heirs and co-emperors on their coinage, as well as other family members or even earlier rulers. Coins were recognized, then as now, as small, portable works of art. With their inscriptions and images, Byzantine coins provide valuable documentation of historical events and a record of the physical appearance of the emperors. The coins shown here include the solidus, the basic gold coin of 24 karats; the tremissis, a gold coin of one-third the weight and value of the solidus; and the nomisma, which in the 10th century replaced the solidus as the standard gold coin.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
144176
label
Solidus of Theodosius I the Great
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
144176
contentType
object
title
Solidus of Theodosius I the Great
description
Byzantine Gold Coins The vast number of surviving Byzantine coins attests to the level of trade across the empire. Controlled and supervised by the emperor, the producers of coins took care to represent his authority and reflect his stature. Talented artists were recruited to engrave the dies (molds) used for the striking of coins. Emperors increasingly came to include their heirs and co-emperors on their coinage, as well as other family members or even earlier rulers. Coins were recognized, then as now, as small, portable works of art. With their inscriptions and images, Byzantine coins provide valuable documentation of historical events and a record of the physical appearance of the emperors. The coins shown here include the solidus, the basic gold coin of 24 karats; the tremissis, a gold coin of one-third the weight and value of the solidus; and the nomisma, which in the 10th century replaced the solidus as the standard gold coin.
date
383–88 CE
citation
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q60742639
genreSpecific
Coins
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Diameter: 2.1 cm (13/16 in.)
cul
Byzantium, Constantinople, Byzantine period
accession
1968.52
Source extras
tec
gold
tombstone
Solidus of Theodosius I the Great , 383–88 CE. Byzantium, Constantinople, Byzantine period. Gold; diameter: 2.1 cm (13/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of William Mathewson Milliken, in memory of his father Thomas Kennedy Milliken, 1968.52
collection
MED - Byzantine
creditline
Gift of William Mathewson Milliken, in memory of his father Thomas Kennedy Milliken
updatedAt
2026-05-29 07:23:58.559000
sourceId
144176
dept
Medieval Art
coll
MED - Byzantine
med
gold
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
ca038121dba422cf