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<p>[QUOTE="+VGO.DVCKS, post: 5132221, member: 110504"]And Poey d'Avant is on Google Books, but you have to trawl for the individual volumes, of which there are at least three. In the shorter term, you could do a lot worse than the cgb Archives website. They have Lots (no pun intended --but there ya go) for both French royal and feudal issues. And they're unusually good for citing their own references, including good ol' Poey. <a href="https://www.cgbfr.com/archive.html" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="https://www.cgbfr.com/archive.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.cgbfr.com/archive.html</a></p><p>...Roberts is, in some ways justly, to go-to reference to look down one's nose at. But it's ideal for, say, Americans who are learning this stuff from the ground up, and I've never regretted still having my copy. It covers the gamut of French coins from Merovingian and Carolingian to royal and feudal. Not comprehensively, but admirably. And it's organized by the coins' main motifs, instead of by geography or reign, so that you can easily find unattributed coins, along with related issues. ...Out of print; hope they don't cost more instead of less.</p><p>Roberts, James N. The Silver Coins of Medieval France (476-1610 AD).</p><p>South Salem, NY: Attic Books, 1996. ISBN 0-915018-54-3.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="+VGO.DVCKS, post: 5132221, member: 110504"]And Poey d'Avant is on Google Books, but you have to trawl for the individual volumes, of which there are at least three. In the shorter term, you could do a lot worse than the cgb Archives website. They have Lots (no pun intended --but there ya go) for both French royal and feudal issues. And they're unusually good for citing their own references, including good ol' Poey. [URL]https://www.cgbfr.com/archive.html[/URL] ...Roberts is, in some ways justly, to go-to reference to look down one's nose at. But it's ideal for, say, Americans who are learning this stuff from the ground up, and I've never regretted still having my copy. It covers the gamut of French coins from Merovingian and Carolingian to royal and feudal. Not comprehensively, but admirably. And it's organized by the coins' main motifs, instead of by geography or reign, so that you can easily find unattributed coins, along with related issues. ...Out of print; hope they don't cost more instead of less. Roberts, James N. The Silver Coins of Medieval France (476-1610 AD). South Salem, NY: Attic Books, 1996. ISBN 0-915018-54-3.[/QUOTE]
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