A Hoard of denarii and antoniniani from the village of Sikirica near Paraćin (Sikirica I)
Апстракт
The Sikirica I hoard was discovered in the village of the same name,
to the south of Paraćin. It consists of 240 denarii and 52 antoniniani and is part
of a scattered find, which did not reach the National Museum in Belgrade in its
entirety. The oldest specimen is Vespasian’s denarius from 70 AD, and the latest
is the antoninianus of Philip I from the eighth issue of the Rome mint, dated in
248-249, so this date represents the terminus post quem of the Sikirica I find. Two
analogous finds have been identified in the territory of Moesia Superior: in the
Kalemegdan (Belgrade) and in Kremenica near Bela Palanka, known as Remesiana
in Antiquity. Despite the incomplete archaeological finds from the field, we may
assume that agricultural holdings existed in the areal of the Sikirica village and that
the find represented the savings of the owner of the villa. As for the cause for its
concealment, the predominant view is that the barbarian raids in the neighbouring
provinces had no...t directly contributed to it. The real reasons for depositing the
Sikirica I hoard should be viewed most probably as the consequence of usurpations
and the emerging imperial pretenders, causing internal turmoil the centre of which
was the Danube River basin.
Кључне речи:
Roman empire / Roman coin hoards / Philip I / Moesia Superior / SikiricaИзвор:
Numizmatičar, 2016, 34, 7-102Издавач:
- Beograd : Narodni muzej
Финансирање / пројекти:
- ИРС - Виминацијум, римски град и легијски војни логор - истраживање материјалне и духовне културе, становништва, применом најсавременијих технологија даљинске детекције, геофизике, GIS-а, дигитализације и 3D визуализације (RS-MESTD-Integrated and Interdisciplinary Research (IIR or III)-47018)
- Градски живот у антици: експанзија градова и урбане цивилизације на Балкану и у суседним областима од хеленистичког до позно римског периода (RS-MESTD-Basic Research (BR or ON)-177005)
- Roman Coin Hoards from Serbia. Numismatic Collection of the National Museum in Belgrade – Ministry of Culture and Information of the Republic of Serbia
Институција/група
Археолошки институт / Institute of ArchaeologyTY - JOUR AU - Borić-Brešković, Bojana AU - Vojvoda, Mirjana PY - 2016 UR - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1005 AB - The Sikirica I hoard was discovered in the village of the same name, to the south of Paraćin. It consists of 240 denarii and 52 antoniniani and is part of a scattered find, which did not reach the National Museum in Belgrade in its entirety. The oldest specimen is Vespasian’s denarius from 70 AD, and the latest is the antoninianus of Philip I from the eighth issue of the Rome mint, dated in 248-249, so this date represents the terminus post quem of the Sikirica I find. Two analogous finds have been identified in the territory of Moesia Superior: in the Kalemegdan (Belgrade) and in Kremenica near Bela Palanka, known as Remesiana in Antiquity. Despite the incomplete archaeological finds from the field, we may assume that agricultural holdings existed in the areal of the Sikirica village and that the find represented the savings of the owner of the villa. As for the cause for its concealment, the predominant view is that the barbarian raids in the neighbouring provinces had not directly contributed to it. The real reasons for depositing the Sikirica I hoard should be viewed most probably as the consequence of usurpations and the emerging imperial pretenders, causing internal turmoil the centre of which was the Danube River basin. PB - Beograd : Narodni muzej T2 - Numizmatičar T1 - A Hoard of denarii and antoniniani from the village of Sikirica near Paraćin (Sikirica I) EP - 102 IS - 34 SP - 7 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1005 ER -
@article{ author = "Borić-Brešković, Bojana and Vojvoda, Mirjana", year = "2016", abstract = "The Sikirica I hoard was discovered in the village of the same name, to the south of Paraćin. It consists of 240 denarii and 52 antoniniani and is part of a scattered find, which did not reach the National Museum in Belgrade in its entirety. The oldest specimen is Vespasian’s denarius from 70 AD, and the latest is the antoninianus of Philip I from the eighth issue of the Rome mint, dated in 248-249, so this date represents the terminus post quem of the Sikirica I find. Two analogous finds have been identified in the territory of Moesia Superior: in the Kalemegdan (Belgrade) and in Kremenica near Bela Palanka, known as Remesiana in Antiquity. Despite the incomplete archaeological finds from the field, we may assume that agricultural holdings existed in the areal of the Sikirica village and that the find represented the savings of the owner of the villa. As for the cause for its concealment, the predominant view is that the barbarian raids in the neighbouring provinces had not directly contributed to it. The real reasons for depositing the Sikirica I hoard should be viewed most probably as the consequence of usurpations and the emerging imperial pretenders, causing internal turmoil the centre of which was the Danube River basin.", publisher = "Beograd : Narodni muzej", journal = "Numizmatičar", title = "A Hoard of denarii and antoniniani from the village of Sikirica near Paraćin (Sikirica I)", pages = "102-7", number = "34", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1005" }
Borić-Brešković, B.,& Vojvoda, M.. (2016). A Hoard of denarii and antoniniani from the village of Sikirica near Paraćin (Sikirica I). in Numizmatičar Beograd : Narodni muzej.(34), 7-102. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1005
Borić-Brešković B, Vojvoda M. A Hoard of denarii and antoniniani from the village of Sikirica near Paraćin (Sikirica I). in Numizmatičar. 2016;(34):7-102. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1005 .
Borić-Brešković, Bojana, Vojvoda, Mirjana, "A Hoard of denarii and antoniniani from the village of Sikirica near Paraćin (Sikirica I)" in Numizmatičar, no. 34 (2016):7-102, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1005 .