What's with different spellings of Volusian's name?

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by hotwheelsearl, May 14, 2022.

  1. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    Why do coins of Volusian often have odd spellings?

    The normal triad seems to be Galussiano, Calussiano, and Volusiano.

    Coins of Antioch get pretty extreme, spelling the name as
    LLOVNANOC, LLOVNIL, COVNAHI, etc.

    What gives?

    Obligatory coin picture:
    Volusian RPC Antioch 1286.JPG
     
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  3. Orange Julius

    Orange Julius Well-Known Member

    ominus1 likes this.
  4. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    A blundering celator?
     
  5. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    The entire shop must have hired the worst celators in the ancient world because almost ALL Antioch issues are garbled beyond belief
     
  6. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    I do notice, however, that there me be a local accent/dialect thing with the name starting with either G, C, or V sounds.
     
    octavius likes this.
  7. octavius

    octavius Well-Known Member

    In some dialects a "G" can sound like a "W"; In some areas of Italy today the word for gloves "guanti" is pronounced more like "wandi". I don't know if this reason holds up for Antioch of 2000 years ago, but the phenomenon does happen. I was told it was a holdover from the Samnites. For that same reason in some dialects a "D" becomes an "R"sound.
     
    ominus1 likes this.
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