John Stradling - William Camden - 1594-11-14
John Stradling, St Donats
John Stradling - William Camden - 1594-11-14
| FINA IDUnique ID of the page ᵖ | 15229 |
| InstitutionName of Institution. | |
| InventoryInventory number. | |
| AuthorAuthor of the document. | John Stradling |
| RecipientRecipient of the correspondence. | William Camden |
| Correspondence dateDate when the correspondence was written: day - month - year . | November 14, 1594 |
| PlacePlace of publication of the book, composition of the document or institution. | St Donats 51° 24' 21.31" N, 3° 31' 49.80" W |
| Associated personsNames of Persons who are mentioned in the annotation. | |
| LiteratureReference to literature. | Smith 1691, pp. 54-8, letter 46Smith 1691, Burnett 2020b, p. 116Burnett 2020b |
| KeywordNumismatic Keywords ᵖ | Numismatic Literature , Hoard , Roman , Roman Imperial , Bronze |
| LanguageLanguage of the correspondence | Latin |
| External LinkLink to external information, e.g. Wikpedia ᵖ |
Map
Grand documentOriginal passage from the "Grand document".
'Stradling wrote back to express his pleasure that the fourth edition of Britannia meant that his ‘Romano-Donatish coins were liberated from all fear of corrosion’. However, Stradling went on to say that, just after he ‘had sent him [Camden] those bronze Roman coins which had emerged on our coastal stretch’, another hoard had come to light, of silver Roman coins. It included six emperors he describes as ‘Domit’ (whom he believed to be Domitius Nero: presumably a Roman Republican coin?), Vespasian and his two sons, Trajan and Antoninus Pius. He added that he hoped to show them to Camden soon after Christmas.' (Burnett 2020b, p. 116)