1st Edition
The Thirty Pieces of Silver Coin Relics in Medieval and Modern Europe
List of Figures
List of Maps
Preface to the English edition
Preface
Awknowledgements
- From the ritual uses of coins to their creation as relics
- The coins of Saint Helena: objects of devotion before the invention of the Thirty Pieces of Silver
- Judas, the Priests and the Thirty Pieces of Silver
- The legend of the Thirty Pieces of Silver: from hagiographic tale to coin relics
- The Thirty Pieces of Silver depicted as instruments of the Passion
- The Thirty Pieces of Silver as relics: from the first specimens to their proliferation
- The Thirty Pieces of Silver as Jewish shekels
- Through the eyes of the Antiquarian and those of the Devout. Identification and debate since the Sixteenth Century
- Conclusions: ancient and modern legends, coin relics and the nature of money
Appendix 1: Inventory of recorded specimens of the Thirty Pieces of Silver
Appendix 2: Collection of sources on the Thirty Pieces of Silver, by Francesco D'Angelo
Bibliography
Index
Biography
Lucia Travaini is Associate Professor of Numismatics, Milan State University, Italy. She has published extensively on coinage and money and has received prizes and honours including the 2012 Medal of the Royal Numismatic Society, London.
‘This is an impressive work which benefits from careful reading. It has much to contribute to studies on medieval religion, the use and interpretation of relics, as well as approaches to studies of material culture … this is an excellent, original and interesting book, which deserves broad readership’ - Medieval Archaeology, Volume 66/2, 2022.
‘Travaini must be applauded for this wonderfully researched and presented work, which has much to offer not merely to the medieval and early modern numismatist, but to people with a range of interests, for instance in popular religious history, in the history of numismatics, and in the non-monetary usage of coins, amongst others’ - The Numismatic Chronicle.
‘ … this is an important and intriguing book that will appeal to scholars of various topics: theology, the function of relics, iconography, numismatics, and economics. Also, Travaini’s study of the thirty pieces of silver opens issues which are sure to interest researchers who are directly involved with the influence of money on the economy of salvation’ – Renaissance Quarterly, Volume 76:1.






