Roman Imperial Coin Inscriptional Lettering

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by jamesicus, May 5, 2017.

  1. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    CAPITALIS MONUMENTALIS LETTERING

    I thought I would post this here because it might be of passing interest to some Roman Imperial coin collectors. It is actually a web page that I will be taking down shortly as I attempt to reduce the pages I maintain due to my diminishing vision and general old age infirmities. I have been a Calligrapher for the past some seventy seven years and so this subject fits in with my numismatic interests.

    As I have mentioned elsewhere, I feel my memory and mental capacity is rapidly deteriorating and I am now uncomfortable posting in Forums such as this. Please excuse any errors and inconsistencies.

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    Roman Imperial coin inscriptional letterforms are based on those of CAPITALIS MONUMENTALIS employed by stone cutters for edifices, monuments, tombstones, etc. A fine extant example is found on Trajan's column in Rome and the essential constructs of these letterforms are the models for all Majuscule (Capital) alphabets used in the western world. Stone cutters in particular still employ their distinctive proportions and terminating serifs. It should be noted that only twenty letters were normally used in the ancient Roman alphabet: A B C D E F G H I L M N O P Q R S T V X. Our modern J and U were not used, their equivalents being I and V respectively. Thus, our modern JULIUS was written IVLIVS. The letter K was seldom used and then only before A. The letters Y and Z were only used when reproducing Greek words. W was not part of the ancient Roman alphabet at all. It was Medieval scribes who formalized the construction models for the letters J K U W Y Z.

    There are numerous excellent photographs of actual CAPITALIS MONUMENTALIS lettering (including that on Trajan's column) mostly accompanied by location information, translations and analyses, at Bill Thayer's Latin Inscriptions section of his LacusCurtius web site

    Although in general the inscriptional letterforms employed by Roman Imperial coin die engravers, particularly those of the early Empire, closely follow CAPITALIS MONUMENTALIS letterforms there are some subtle differences, mostly resulting from the limited space available on coins for inscriptional lettering. Most notably, they were modified to produce closer spacing and a compaction of the wide letters C O Q and M resulting in more uniform and "square" lettering. The essential letterform constructs were closely followed for coins of the early to mid Empire who's inscriptions are generally stately and elegant: E and F have equal length horizontal bars; A has a sharp apex; V has a sharp junction; the bowls of B P R S are always nicely formed. P is frequently rendered on Imperial coins with an open bowl, i.e. not touching the vertical stem at the bottom - especially on coins of the early Empire. The quality of Roman Imperial coin lettering reached its zenith on late period Julio-Claudian coins.

    Adaptation of Capitalis Monumentalis Letterforms by Coin Die Engravers

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    The coin die engravers used a selection of chisels (burins), stamps and punches -- the quality of the lettering may therefor have depended to some extent on the skill of the tool makers. The size of the planchet and the quality of the coin metal would also be determining factors. Certainly blundered letters did occur as evidenced by the S in CAES and COS on the following almost mint state Quadrans of Claudius. Rendering well proportioned and constructed Capital Roman lettering has always demanded considerable skill and it seems there has always existed a disparity of skills among the crafstsmen who executed them -- regardless of the tools and media employed.

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    CLAUDIUS, RIC Volume I, No. 88

    Examples of early Roman Empire coin lettering

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    Examples of late Roman Empire coin lettering

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  3. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    i'm going to educate myself on this more later, thank you sir for posting! these things you give & leave us will be your legacy.
     
    Hispanicus likes this.
  4. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    Thank you for your interest gregarious. If you (or anyone else) would like to check out my Calligraphy pages (I will be taking them off-line shortly) they are at:

    http://jp29.org/itdr.htm
     
    stevex6 and gregarious like this.
  5. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    thanks! i will. you cannot leave them for posterity?
     
  6. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    I am working on it gregarious, but they require constant maintenance to keep them up to date. I am going to have to terminate my web service provider contract -- my dear wife cannot use it.
     
    gregarious likes this.
  7. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    i understand sir. maybe we can download the info for the roman stuff here anyway.
     
  8. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    Oh yes, of course, gregarious. Any member of this Forum is welcome to download and use any of the content you mention. I would appreciate an authorship aknowledgement however -- jamesicus will do just fine.
     
    gregarious likes this.
  9. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

    gregarious likes this.
  10. Eduard

    Eduard Supporter**

    jamesicus, thank you very much for taking the time to post this!

    I found it very interesting and educational to me as a collector of imperial coins, and a topic I was largely ignorant of before reading your notes.
     
    gregarious likes this.
  11. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Hmm, I was going to save his pages to the Internet Archive ("Wayback Machine") but when I click to save a page (http://jp29.org/capitals.htm, for instance) I get a message saying

    Page cannot be displayed due to robots.txt

    Clicking for additional information appears to indicate the page cannot be saved to the archive. Does anyone know a workaround?
     
    gregarious likes this.
  12. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    Thanks for that write-up, @jamesicus. I read your page some years ago and found it very educational. Glad to be able to finally thank the author :).
     
    gregarious likes this.
  13. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    gregarious likes this.
  14. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    of course!
     
  15. PMONNEY

    PMONNEY Flaminivs

    Thank you so much for sharing with us your precious comments. You are so right to do so. This is a most valuable inheritage ! Wishing you good health and many more years to spoil ancient coin collectors.
     
    gregarious likes this.
  16. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    you go TIF! i wish i could help, but you know my computer skills(turn on punch in enter, ima regular digital tim leary><)
     
  17. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    Very cool info. Thanks for sharing Jamesicus!
     
    gregarious likes this.
  18. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    WOW, you perform gorgeous work and this is a great write up.

    LOL, my writing is ATROCIOUS. I print everything because no one can read my writing, and everyone COMPLAINS about my "printing"!

    I learned a little calligraphy in middle school umpteen years ago. That was a disaster... :D
     
    gregarious likes this.
  19. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    ha! i spent all my 2nd grade recess inside rewriting all my stuff>< AND have lost jobs because of my calligraphic writing a time of two><..
     
    Alegandron likes this.
  20. David@PCC

    David@PCC allcoinage.com

    @jamesicus will need to change his htaccess file to allow others to access his page.
     
  21. Hispanicus

    Hispanicus Stand Fast!

    Jamesicus,
    Thanks for such a valuable and interesting post. I've always had an interest in letter form and your breakdown of its stylistic evolution is a big help as an identification tool.
     
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