Trivia - not so easy

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by GDJMSP, Jun 13, 2004.

  1. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Here's one that may even cause our more advanced members to put their thinking caps on ;)

    When was the first book on coins printed ?

    I will qualify my question by saying that when I say printed - I mean on a printing press - not written by hand.
     
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  3. cdcda

    cdcda New Member

    You have me stumped. The printing press was invented in the 15th century and I would guess there was some numismatic literature relatively early on, but I could not find any references.

    If you limit the conversation to U.S. Numismatic literature the question might be a little simpler ;-)
     
  4. jody526

    jody526 New Member

    Wasn't it the 1514 Paris edition of Bude's De Asse et partibus , published by Josse Badius?
     
  5. cdcda

    cdcda New Member

    My research is turning up the same book as the first book to be substantially dedicated to numismatics. Way to go jody526!
     
  6. jody526

    jody526 New Member

    Thanks, cdcda.
    I hope GDJMSP will be along later and confirm that we are right.
    And please, Just call me Jody. (the numbers are my birthday LOL)
     
  7. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Sorry guys - there is one even earlier :(

    Now I'm not gonna say what - but there is a hint in this post ;) Just about everybody knows the first book of any kind ever printed was the Gutenberg Bible in 1453. Kinda easy to see why that was the first.

    But it has always amazed me that considering all the things that a book could be printed about - that the first coin book was to be printed not too long after that :eek:

    By the way - the answer can be found on the internet ;)
     
  8. pog

    pog New Member

    well the printing press was invented in 1436 by Johannes Gutenberg. i still havent been able to find a book dedicated to numismatics though. :-{. i will keep looking.
     
  9. pog

    pog New Member

    is it - The Laws of the Visigoths:
    On Coinage, c. 681
     
  10. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Nope - that's not it either pog. The book you mention, although much older than the one I have in mind, is like many others in that they were written in manuscript form - by hand.


    If no one submits the correct answer by tomorrow night - I will provide it at that time ;)
     
  11. jtwax

    jtwax Senior Member

    Fulvio, Andrea - Illistrium Imagines, 1547
     
  12. Andrew

    Andrew New Member

    How about "De asse et partibus eius" by Guillaume Budé, published in 1514?
     
  13. Andrew

    Andrew New Member

    This from:
    http://www.moneymuseum.com/standard...rste_muenzforsch/erste_muenzforsch_unten.html

    "In 1511, Margarethe Peutinger, wife of the Humanist Conrad Peutinger, sent a treatise on the images and titles of the Roman Emperors on the coins of their times to her brother Christopher Welser, asking him to arrange the publication of this work."

    Although I can't find whether or not it was actually published.





    And from the same site, here's a useful reference book on numismatics ;)
    "In 1553, Guillaume Rouille published in Lyon his work "Promptuaire des médailles des plus renommées personnes qui ont ésté depuis le commencement du monde" (Collection of medals of the most famous persons who have ever lived since the beginning of the world). In fact, he attributed the coin portraits quite arbitrarily, claiming to find images of Adam, Noah and Agamemnon, for example. He had little interest in the real subjects."
     
  14. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Andrew - that would be the one ;) Great job on your search capabilities :D
     
  15. pog

    pog New Member

    awesome site andrew thanx.
    and thanx to gdjmsp.
     
  16. CohibaCris

    CohibaCris New Member

    I thought about posting that one this morning, but it was really early yet then!:D
     
  17. joecoin

    joecoin New Member


    Was it the Peutinger or the Rouille?
     
  18. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator


    In 1511, Margarethe Peutinger ;)
     
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