Travaini, Prof. Lucia
Mrs. Travaini graduated with honours in 1976 at Rome University La Sapienza, dissertation in Medieval Archaeology, and later became interested in coins and specialised herself in medieval numismatics. Before being appointed Associate Professor at Milan University, Prof. Travaini worked in the Coin Cabinet of the National Archaological Museum in Rome, was invited to Cambridge by Professor Philip Grierson to work on the Medieval European Coinage project and worked as Senior Research Associate in the Fitzwilliam Museum.Personal website Prof. Lucia Travaini >>
Articles by this Author
Saints and Sinners: Coins in Medieval Italian Graves
- By Travaini, Prof. Lucia
- Published 1 July 2009
- Classical Antiquities, Coins and Medals
- Unrated
When discussing coin finds in Italian graves it is best to study the phenomenon across the entire medieval period, from the sixth to the fifteenth century. Only by comparing poorly documented periods with those for which the written evidence is more plentiful is it possible to appreciate continuities and disjunctures over time. It is also helpful to consider coins in graves in the wider context of the ritual use of coins. Few coins are found in ancient and early medieval graves compared to other artefacts. In the later middle ages, when graves did not normally contain gravegoods, an occasional coin is the only object that may have caused that grave to be recorded.

