News
Insights into the Academy Program: Coins Tell Stories
Ancient coins are more than just means of payment – they tell stories about politics, religion, and society. The new Academy project “IMAGINES NVMMORVM” (ImagNum) uses AI to unlock and make their imagery accessible for research. The Union of Academies has published an article on this – click here to read the article (available only in German)
Save the Date – Ceremonial Event for the Project Launch of Imagines Nummorum
We would like to ceremoniously celebrate the start of our Academy project ImagNum on Wednesday, April 9, 2025, at 5 p.m. We already cordially invite you to the ceremony at the Lise Meitner-Saal, Unter den Linden 8, 10117 Berlin.
Press Release on the Project Launch
Further information about the project launch can be found in the official press release (in German).
Project Launch Imagines Nummorum
We started our project on January 1, 2025. You can find the project page at https://www.bbaw.de/forschung/imagines-nvmmorvm-thesaurus-iconographicus-nummorum-graecorum-online.
Corpus Nummorum News
December 20, 2025
CfP: Traditions and Innovations in Numismatics
The third edition of the international conference “BULGARIAN NUMISMATIC READINGS” will take place in Plovdiv between 25 and 27 June 2026. The Call for Paper has been extended until December 20.
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December 2, 2025
Join us!
This year as well, ImagNum is once again participating in the Digital Classicist Seminar: The ACCSN Initiative: Discovering the Potential of Digital Methods by facing their Limits
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November 27-28, 2025
ImagNum visits the Academy in Mainz
The Academy project Disecta membra is hosting an interesting conference: »Teil und Ganzes: Wissenschaftliche Zugänge zu zerstreuten Dingen«.
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November 6, 2025
Exciting lecture
Our colleague, Paul Seyfried, M.A., speaks about ‘The Coinage of Lampsakos. Continuities and Phenomena from 800 Years of Local Coinage’.
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November 13, 2025, 6 pm
5th Heinrich-Dressel-Lecture
Prof. Dr Hartwin Brandt (University of Bamberg) talks about ‘Contingency and communication. The Roman emperors and their coins.’
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