Generated by GPT-5-mini| American Journal of Numismatics | |
|---|---|
| Title | American Journal of Numismatics |
| Discipline | Numismatics |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | American Numismatic Society |
| Country | United States |
| History | 1866–present |
| Frequency | Annual / irregular |
American Journal of Numismatics is a long-established scholarly periodical devoted to the study of coins, medals, and related numismatic materials. Founded in the 19th century, it has published research on coinage from antiquity to modern issues and has served as a forum connecting curators, academics, and collectors associated with institutions such as the American Numismatic Society, the British Museum, and the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Articles have often intersected with work at the Hermitage Museum, the Fitzwilliam Museum, and university departments at Harvard University and the University of Oxford.
The journal traces origins to initiatives by the American Numismatic Society contemporaneous with the founding of the Smithsonian Institution and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, emerging in an era when numismatic scholarship intersected with collections at the British Museum, the Vatican Museums, and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. Early contributors included figures associated with the Royal Numismatic Society, the Numismatic Society of Philadelphia, and collectors allied with the American Antiquarian Society and the New-York Historical Society. Over time the publication reflected methodological shifts prompted by work at the École pratique des hautes études, the Collège de France, and the University of Cambridge. Major 20th-century developments paralleled cataloguing efforts at the Ashmolean Museum, the Kunsthistorisches Museum, and the National Archaeological Museum of Spain, while late 20th- and 21st-century scholarship drew on excavation reports linked to Pompeii, Ephesus, and Antioch.
The journal covers a range of subjects including coinage of Ancient Greece, Rome, and the Byzantine Empire; medieval issues from the Kingdom of England, the Holy Roman Empire, and the Kingdom of France; and modern topics tied to the United States Mint, the Royal Mint, and the Monnaie de Paris. Contributions often address iconography discussed in relation to the British Library, numismatic hoards reported to UNESCO, metallurgical analyses conducted at the Max Planck Institute, and provenance research involving the J. Paul Getty Museum and the Louvre. The periodical publishes studies that relate to legal and diplomatic contexts such as the Treaty of Paris, military campaigns like the Napoleonic Wars, and economic histories connected to the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It also includes catalogues tied to collections at the Fitzwilliam Museum, the Bodleian Library, and the Library of Congress.
Published by the American Numismatic Society, the journal has editorial oversight often linked to scholars with affiliations at Columbia University, Princeton University, and New York University. Editorial boards have included curators from the British Museum, the Hermitage Museum, and the Smithsonian Institution, and advisory input from members of the Royal Numismatic Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Indexing and distribution intersect with library networks such as the New York Public Library, the British Library, and the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Special issues have sometimes been coordinated with symposia held at institutions like the Institute for Advanced Study, the Warburg Institute, and the Institute of Archaeology, University College London.
Contributors have ranged from museum curators associated with the Ashmolean Museum and the British Museum to academics based at the University of Chicago, Yale University, and Stanford University. Famous articles have treated coin hoards discovered at Pompeii, numismatic portraits related to Augustus and Constantine discussed alongside Roman archaeology, and studies of Renaissance medals connected to the Medici and Habsburg collections. Notable contributors have included scholars who also published with Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, and Brill, and who participated in projects with the Max Planck Institute, the École française de Rome, and the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut. Articles have engaged with themes present in the catalogs of the Morgan Library & Museum, the Getty, and the Museo Nazionale Romano.
The journal has influenced numismatic practice at institutions such as the Royal Collection Trust, the Smithsonian Institution, and the American Numismatic Society itself, informing conservation policies developed with the Getty Conservation Institute and cataloguing standards used by the British Museum and the National Gallery of Art. Its research has been cited in monographs from Cambridge University Press and Oxford University Press, and in doctoral theses produced at the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge, and Harvard University. Reviews and reception have appeared in bulletins of the Royal Numismatic Society, proceedings of the International Numismatic Congress, and in forums associated with the American Historical Association and the Archaeological Institute of America.
Back issues are held in collections at the American Numismatic Society, the New York Public Library, Columbia University Libraries, and the Library of Congress, with digitization projects coordinated with partners such as Google Books, JSTOR, and the HathiTrust Digital Library alongside institutional repositories at Harvard University and Princeton University. Special collections and manuscript correspondence related to the journal are preserved in archives linked to the American Numismatic Society, the New-York Historical Society, and the Smithsonian Institution Archives. Microfilm and print runs are catalogued in WorldCat records accessible through the British Library, the Bibliothèque nationale de France, and the National Library of Medicine.
Category:Numismatics journals Category:American Numismatic Society