Person studying or collecting currencies, coins or paper money
A numismatist is a specialist, researcher, and/or well-informed collector of numismatics/coins ("of coins"; from Late Latinnumismatis, genitive of numisma). Numismatists can include collectors, specialist dealers, and scholar-researchers who use coins (and possibly, other currency) in object-based research.[1] Although use of the term numismatics was first recorded in English in 1799,[2] people had been collecting and studying coins long before then all over the world. (The branch of numismatics that deals with the study and collection of paper currency and banknotes by notaphilists is called Notaphily)
Numismatist collectors
This group chiefly may derive pleasure from the simple ownership of monetary devices and studying these coins as private amateur scholars. In the classical field, amateur collector studies have achieved quite remarkable progress in the field. Examples include Walter Breen, a noted numismatist who was not an avid collector, and King Farouk I of Egypt, an avid collector[3] who had very little interest in numismatics. Harry Bass by comparison was a noted collector who was also a numismatist.
Numismatist dealers
In this group are the coin dealers. Often called professional numismatists, they authenticate or grade coins for commercial purposes. The buying and selling of coin collections by numismatists who are professional dealers advance the study of money, and expert numismatists are consulted by historians, museum curators, and archaeologists. See, for example, the International Association of Professional Numismatists (IAPN) and the British Numismatic Trade Association (BNTA).
Numismatist researchers
In this group are scholar numismatists working in public collections, universities or as independent scholars acquiring knowledge about monetary devices, their systems, their economy and their historical context.[4] Coins are especially relevant as a source in the pre-modern period.
Training and recognition
There are very few academic institutions around the world that offer formal training in numismatics. Some may offer numismatics as part of a course in classical studies, ancient history, history or archaeology. Scholar numismatists may focus on numismatics at the postgraduate level, where the training is more research-based. As a result, most scholar numismatists will approach numismatics from within another academic discipline (e.g. history, archaeology, ancient or modern languages, metal sciences), perhaps after attending a numismatic summer school, usually based where there is an excellent coin collection. Recognition of scholarly numismatic expertise may be in the form of a postgraduate qualification, and/or in the form of a medal awarded by a numismatic society: for example, the Medal of the Royal Numismatic Society, which may be awarded to scholar numismatists of any nationality.
Donald H. Kagin[5] earned the first PhD in Numismatics granted in the United States in 1979.[6]
Numismatic institutes
The Institute for Numismatics and History of Money[7] Vienna (Austria)
As scholar numismatists work on coins (and related objects) within their particular area of interest (e.g. a particular part of the world, a particular period of history, or a particular culture), they are often known in those fields, as well as in numismatics. Biographical resources relating specifically to numismatists include the following:
Manville, H.E., Biographical Dictionary of British and Irish Numismatics, Encyclopaedia of British Numismatics. Volume IV (London, 2009)[27]
Smith, Pete:, American Numismatic Biographies (1992).[28]
^"What is Numismatics?". corporatefinanceinstitute.com. Corporate Finance Institute. Archived from the original on 17 January 2022. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
^Michel Amandry (2004). "Michael Grant (1914-2004)". Inc-cin.org. INC Compte Rendu 51. pp. 13–19. Archived from the original on 3 August 2019. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
^ ab"INC cin". Inc-cin.org. Archived from the original on 29 July 2017. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
^N. Keith Rutter (2013). "Barclay Vincent Head (1844-1914)". Inc-cin.org. INC Compte Rendu 60. pp. 25–37. Archived from the original on 3 August 2019. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
^Andrew Burnett (1999). "George Hill (1867-1948)". Inc-cin.org. INC Compte Rendu 46. pp. 64–68. Archived from the original on 3 August 2019. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
^"CONTACT US". www.ashmolean.org. Archived from the original on 29 November 2021. Retrieved 23 January 2021.