Edward Lhuyd - Richard Richardson - 1698-06-19
Edward Lhuyd, Narberth
Edward Lhuyd - Richard Richardson - 1698-06-19
| FINA IDUnique ID of the page ᵖ | 14553 |
| InstitutionName of Institution. | London, Royal Society |
| InventoryInventory number. | LBO 14, pp. 349-53 |
| AuthorAuthor of the document. | Edward Lhuyd |
| RecipientRecipient of the correspondence. | Richard Richardson |
| Correspondence dateDate when the correspondence was written: day - month - year . | June 19, 1698 |
| PlacePlace of publication of the book, composition of the document or institution. | Narberth 51° 48' 20.81" N, 4° 44' 28.97" W |
| Associated personsNames of Persons who are mentioned in the annotation. | William Camden, William Nicolson, Humphrey Humphreys |
| LiteratureReference to literature. | Camden 1586Camden 1586, Burnett 2020b, pp. 730, 1554Burnett 2020b |
| KeywordNumismatic Keywords ᵖ | British Coins , Celtic , Julius Caesar , Welsh |
| LanguageLanguage of the correspondence | English |
| External LinkLink to external information, e.g. Wikpedia ᵖ | http://tinyurl.com/ya3jtco2 |
Map
Grand documentOriginal passage from the "Grand document".
'I have been very inquisitive about Coyns of the Princes of Wales since I began this Undertaking, but could never see one of them; tho’ the Bishop of Bangor (who is very well skill’d in British Antiquities) told me a Relation of his kept one of Lhywelyn ab Iorwerth, who was co’temporary with Richard I and K. John, in his Pocket several Years, and shewed it many of the Bishops Acquaintance, still living, who confirm it. By the Princes of Wales I understand the British Princes from K. Kadwaladr about the Year 600 to the last Prince ap Gruffydh about the Year 1280. I have found several of the more ancient British Coyns; whereof you see divers Figures in Camden. My Friend Mr Nicholson quotes Caesar for the Britons having no Coyns; whereas on the contrary Caesars Words are, Nummo utuntur parvo et aeneo: Nor can I see any reason to doubt of British Coyns of all sorts of Metal, till he or some other inform whose Coyns those are which Mr Camden and other Writers take to be British.' (Burnett 2020b, p. 730)