Pamestinės monetos Kurhauzo aplinkoje Palangoje

Direct Link:
Collection:
Sklaidos publikacijos / Dissemination publications
Document Type:
Straipsnis / Article
Language:
Lietuvių kalba / Lithuanian
Title:
Pamestinės monetos Kurhauzo aplinkoje Palangoje
Alternative Title:
Lost coins in the vicinity of Kurhauzas in Palanga
In the Journal:
Archeologiniai tyrinėjimai Lietuvoje. 2017, 2016 metais, p. 475-479
Keywords:
LT
Archeologiniai tyrinėjimai / Archaeological investigations; Pinigai. Valiuta / Money. Currency; Numizmatika / Numismatics; Palanga; Lietuva (Lithuania).
Summary / Abstract:

LT2016 m. rudenį Palangoje, Kurhauzo P pusėje, archeologai, tyrinėdami perkastas žemes, po jomis aptiktus kultūrinius sluoksnius bei pastato Palangos dvaro sodyboje liekanas, rado 47 pavienes visame tiriamame plote išmėtytas XV a. vidurio-XIX a. pabaigos monetas. Apibendrinant radinius galima teigti, kad Palangos dvaro teritorijoje per maždaug 74 metus (nuo Zigmanto II Augusto valdymo pradžios 1548 m. iki 1622 m.) buvo pamestos 35 monetos. Vidutiniškai kas antri metai pamesta viena moneta, į pamestinių monetų serijos pabaigą kasmet buvo pametama po monetą. [...]. [Iš straipsnio, p. 475, 477-478]

ENIn 2016, a survey on the S side of Kurhauzas on the grounds of Palanga Manor in Palanga yielded 47 isolated mid 15th late 19th century coins lost throughout the investigated area. They have allowed the activities of Palanga residents at this location to be separated into three separate stages. The oldest discovered coin is a dateless shilling minted in Danzig (Pol. Gdańsk) in the name of King Casimir of Poland. Lithuanian halfgroats minted by Grand Dukes Alexander and Žygimantas of Lithuania were circulating during that period (up until the first quarter of the 17th century). Polish halfgroats, which were a fifth cheaper than Lithuanian halfgroats, were brought to the Lithuanian coast in the late 1520s early 1530s. 35 coins were lost on the grounds of Palanga Manor over roughly 74 years (from the beginning of the reign of Sigismund II August in 1548 to 1622). Their analysis allows one to state that the manor’s grounds were abandoned circa 1625–1626 at the latest. The next stage in the location’s use is connected with the cemetery that existed there, at which time isolated Russian and Prussian coins were lost. No analogies have been found in Lithuania of the Prussian-Brandenburg three pfennig coins minted in Berlin in 1802 and the 1807 Saxony halfgroat–1/48 thaler. These coins were left at Palanga by Prussian soldiers marching into Russia with Napoleon’s Grande Armée. In the last stage, four Russian coins were lost during its ownership by the Tiškevičius family. [From the publication]

ISSN:
1392-5512
Related Publications:
Lietuvos ir Latvijos pasienio (Palatvijo) regiono samprata / Auksė Noreikaitė. Acta humanitarica universitatis Saulensis. 2023, t. 30, p. 71-87.
Permalink:
https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/107669
Updated:
2024-05-04 21:20:16
Metrics:
Views: 4
Export: