Category Archives: David Yoon

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Medieval Money at the Morgan Library

By David Yoon for the American Numismatic Society (ANS) ……
As previous posts have mentioned, some of the best opportunities to see objects from our collections occur when other institutions borrow from us for an exhibition on a particular theme.

A new exhibition at the Morgan Library and Museum on the theme of Medieval Money, Merchants and Morality, which will be on view from November 10, 2023, to March 10, 2024. American Numismatic Society items on display include two 17th-century German coin balances; gold florins and billon groots; part of a hoard of Venetian torneselli; a Danish bracteate penny; and an Austrian double guldenthaler, among others.

Billon double tournois of Charles VII, Poitiers, 1431. ANS 1942.23.413. 1.045 g.
Billon double tournois of Charles VII, Poitiers, 1431. ANS 1942.23.413. 1.045 g.

Curated by the art historians Diane Wolfthal and Deirdre Jackson, this exhibition shows the items borrowed from the ANS alongside manuscripts and paintings that depict some of the concerns and anxieties that people had about money in late medieval and Renaissance Europe. It raises a number of questions about the culture of money that are worth exploring. Money was deeply problematical in the context of medieval European culture, in which religious beliefs were widely taken for granted. Money, as a dynamic and versatile form of wealth, was greatly desired and eagerly sought, but it was also regarded with more than a touch of suspicion and disdain. It is possible, of course, to explain this attitude internally to the culture, with reference to the importance placed on renunciation of possessions and earthly pleasures in early Christianity as well as to the agrarian values of rural landholders. To have or to desire money beyond basic needs was, in short, sinful and a pathway to eternal damnation.

Gold angel of Henry VI, London, 1470-1471. ANS 1954.237.19. 5.008 g.
Gold angel of Henry VI, London, 1470-1471. ANS 1954.237.19. 5.008 g.

Religious distrust of money and monetary wealth is not unique to the culture of medieval Christianity, though. It might be worth thinking about whether there are also explanations internal to the concept of money that might contribute to these attitudes.

Money is, at its core, a technology for turning value, whatever that is, into interchangeable quantized units that are unburdened by any element of moral judgment. Anthropologists like the late Nancy Munn and David Graeber pointed to the verbal slippage from values in the sense of moral principles to value in the sense of an interchangeable measure as a clue to how acts of exchange could be essentially social and moral in attitude or could become something very different. It is hard to imagine any technology that is more alien to the concerns of many religions than money: the social disembeddedness and the moral neutrality–or often both–are directly opposed to the moral philosophies that underlie many religions.

The moral ambiguity of money makes it an ambivalent technology in many cultures. As the Morgan Library exhibition shows for medieval Europe, money could be sinful but could also be turned to purposes regarded positively. This exhibit is a reminder to us—and a reminder filled with beautiful works—that coins are not just useful or desirable objects; they are also a way that people relate to each other, and to their own consciences.

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Medieval Money at the Morgan Library - David Yoon ANS

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Medieval European Numismatics in the United States

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… The International Congress on Medieval Studies has met every May at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo for over 50 years, with the notable exception of the years 2020 through 2022 due to COVID. The resumption of an in-person conference this year was a welcome opportunity to […]

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The Florentine Gold Florin: How Much Is That in Dollars?

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… Something we are asked from time to time is how much a past coin was worth in terms of present-day money. It can be hard enough sometimes to say what the coin was worth at the time it was in circulation. Equating it to present-day money […]

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The Coins That Aren’t There

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… It has long been said that the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. This is an essential principle in archaeology, where the formation of evidence is usually very complex and poorly understood. Various alternative possible explanations are always conceivable for the patterns observed. Nevertheless, […]

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What Is a Mint?

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… Some questions seem too obvious to be worth asking. Everyone knows that a mint is a production facility that strikes coins. But wait… are facilities that produce tokens or medals included? Is it really the facility at all, or rather the organization that operates it? Or […]

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Islamic and Medieval Coins: New Years and Old Years

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) ……   This essay is being written on December 31, 2021, to be posted on January 4, 2022. It seems like a suitable moment to think about calendars and years and how people define them. The presence of year dates on coins is tremendously useful to the […]

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Early Modern World Coins: The Ottoman Kuruş and the Control of Money

By Ellen Nye and David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… In August 2018, as the country of Turkey faced a currency crisis, its president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan called for people to convert their dollars or euros into Turkish lira. The Turkish lira had dropped by almost 50% against the dollar in the previous […]

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How Do Numismatists Decide Where a Coin Is From?

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… There are many ways to describe where a coin is from. One by reference to the place of minting (e.g., Kese). If this is known, it offers a specific, relatively unambiguous location that allows a dot to be placed on a map without too much thought. […]

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Ancient and Medieval Coins With Two-Sided Legends

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… Many–probably most–coins do not have any inherent directionality in the images or legends on their two sides. There may be some difference in the perceived importance or generality of their information, but each side may convey its information independently of the other. Thus, arbitrary conventions exist […]

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Ancient and Medieval Coins With Two-Sided Legends

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… Many–probably most–coins do not have any inherent directionality in the images or legends on their two sides. There may be some difference in the perceived importance or generality of their information, but each side may convey its information independently of the other. Thus, arbitrary conventions exist […]

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Managing the ANS Collection: An Interview With Elena Stolyarik

By Austin Andrews for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… Dr. Elena Stolyarik, Collections Manager at the American Numismatic Society (ANS), has held nearly every single one of the Society’s over 800,000 objects. As a critical member of the curatorial staff, the Collections Manager diligently maintains the Society’s vast, encyclopedic holdings of coins and currency, medals […]

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Medieval World Coins: The Allan Evans Papers

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… The many treasures of the American Numismatic Society’s (ANS) archives include not only the Society’s own history and papers documenting the activities of many of its former staff and officers. There are also resources for researchers, many of which document the activities of numismatic collectors or […]

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Public and Private in Coin Production

By David Yoon for American Numismatic Society (ANS) …… There is a commonly encountered conventional distinction between coins and tokens such that coins are produced and issued by governments as legal tender, whereas tokens are produced and issued by private businesses and derive their value only from their redemption by the issuer. This distinction is […]

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