Dr. Aleksandar Brzic will be talking about coins and how they are dealt with.
Nearly all archaeological sites dating from c650BC to the modern period will
yield some coins. Sometimes only a couple of lost pieces, but sometimes pots
full of silver and gold in the shape of coin hoards. How does Archaeology deal
with them? What do Archaeologists do with these coins and what are they used
for? In this lecture we will be concerned with some of the practical questions
in this process: can you just dig them up and take them home? What rules apply
in Portugal, the UK, and in other countries? Who do they belong to and why? In
recent years, particularly fired up by the wars in the Middle East and the
destiny of many cultural artefacts during these times, the discussion about
such questions has sometimes reached dimensions and passions hitherto very
foreign to the normal scientific dispute. Aleksandar will be looking into the
example of the UK’s Portable Antiquities Scheme and contrasting laws in
Portugal and Germany and will let you draw your own conclusions.
The second
part of the presentation will be concerned with coins that you may have at
home. For example, coins that you have somewhere in a drawer, coins that you
have inherited or coins that you would like to sell or donate to a museum, but
have no idea how to deal with them or what they are worth. Whilst not
pretending a give exhaustive advice for every individual situation, Aleksandar
will present some general principles and concrete recommendations for how to
deal with such situations and prevent people from doing the wrong thing and
regretting it later.
Dr. Aleksandar Brzic was born in Novi Sad, Yugoslavia, and has lived in the Algarve
since 2019. He retired to Portugal after a career in IT Management and now has
the opportunity to dedicate his free time to the passion that he has had since
he was a teenager: coins. He holds a doctorate in Economic History and is
active as an independent scholar in the field of Numismatics. He specialises in
the history of gold coinage and has recently published about the use of gold
coinage in jewellery in different countries of Europe.
Non-members
are welcome to attend AAA lectures for a 5 euro admission fee, with all money
raised by the AAA being used for archaeological grants and speakers. For more
information contact algarvearchass@gmail.com,
visit arquealgarve.weebly.com or Facebook ‘Algarve Archaeological Association’.
Please check the website or Facebook page for any last-minute changes.