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Chapter

Self, other and the use and appropriation of late Roman coins in peninsular India (4th–7th centuries CE)

Chapter

Self, other and the use and appropriation of late Roman coins in peninsular India (4th–7th centuries CE)

DOI link for Self, other and the use and appropriation of late Roman coins in peninsular India (4th–7th centuries CE)

Self, other and the use and appropriation of late Roman coins in peninsular India (4th–7th centuries CE) book

Self, other and the use and appropriation of late Roman coins in peninsular India (4th–7th centuries CE)

DOI link for Self, other and the use and appropriation of late Roman coins in peninsular India (4th–7th centuries CE)

Self, other and the use and appropriation of late Roman coins in peninsular India (4th–7th centuries CE) book

ByRebecca Darley
BookNegotiating Cultural Identity

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Edition 2nd Edition
First Published 2019
Imprint Routledge India
Pages 19
eBook ISBN 9780429274169

ABSTRACT

This chapter examines the way in which scholarship on late Roman coins in India and Sri Lanka has implicitly and explicitly privileged commercial narratives and economic spaces in its explanations for their presence and use in the subcontinent. It discusses from an economic perspective the spatial context in which many of these coins have been found. The chapter highlights the non-economic distribution of such coins and suggests alternative interpretations for the same. Coins are one of the most powerful archaeological traces of past movements of objects precisely because they are portable and durable: they cross space often without being transformed or annihilated by it, in the way that people or organic products may be. The Roman Empire at the start of this in-between period encircled the Mediterranean, east and west, controlled the routes through Egypt to the Red Sea and thence, to the Indian Ocean, and abutted the Sasanian Persian Empire in the east.

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