Since 1997 the Portable Antiquities Scheme has recorded almost 1.5
million objects found in England and Wales, the vast majority discovered
by members of the public rather than professional archaeologists. Among
these finds are more than 10,000 early medieval coins. Each one of these
coins has its own story to tell, from its minting, use and loss through
to its eventual recovery and recording. In this book, Dr John Naylor,
the PAS's National Finds Adviser for Early Medieval and Later Coinage,
explores the Anglo-Saxon world through these coin finds, tracing the
development of coinage from the end of Roman Britain to the Norman
Conquest of 1066 and how they were used by early medieval people. As
well as their use in trading, he shows how they can help us to
understand how the Anglo-Saxons saw themselves through looking at coin
design and iconography, and how they were used in diverse and
interesting ways such as their inclusion in burials and hoards, and
their re-use as items of jewellery.