Stefano Locatelli
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The Inscription Numismatic Font used for coin legends on page 29 is provided courtesy of The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

1.1 The gold florin of Florence – specimen of the earliest issue, scale 2:1. (Museo Nazionale di San Matteo in Pisa, Ripostiglio delle Logge dei Banchi – Pisa, inv. 8367; with the permission of the Ministero della Cultura – Direzione regionale Musei della Toscana – Firenze. Further reproduction or duplication by any means whatsoever is prohibited.) page 30
1.2 The silver grosso of Florence, c. 1235, scale 2:1. (Museo Nazionale di San Matteo in Pisa, Collezione Franceschi, inv. 6314; with the permission of the Ministero della Cultura – Direzione regionale Musei della Toscana – Firenze. Further reproduction or duplication by any means whatsoever is prohibited.) 62
2.1 Gold florins in the Diplomatico collection of the State Archives of Florence, 1252–94 (10,582 parchments consulted). The light-grey bars indicate the number of documents available per year, the dark-grey bars specify the quantity of sources mentioning gold florins per year. Dates have been left as they are written in the originals. 86
3.1 The ‘Circle of the Sphere’ in the Secretum secretorum. (The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, MS. Laud Or. 210, fo. 90r.; only a detail was used. Annotations by the author based on Alexander Murray, Reason and Society in the Middle Ages (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), plate II.) 124
4.1 Percentages of coins collected from the ecclesiastical provinces between 1274 (Year One) and 1278 (Year Four). 194
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The Florentine florin

The politics and culture of money in the Middle Ages

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