John Kent (numismatist)

John Philip Cozens Kent, FSA, FBA (28 September 1928 – 22 October 2000) was a British numismatist.

He was born the son of a railway official in Hertfordshire and educated at Minchenden Grammar School and University College, London, where he was awarded a BA in 1949 and a PhD in 1951. After two years National Service he was appointed Assistant Keeper in the British Museum’s Department of Coins and Medals.[1][2]

There his main interest was the coins of the late Roman Period, contributing to the reference book on Late Roman Bronze Coinage which was published in 1960. Other work covered the reclassification of imitative coins of the Dark Ages in the 5th century, assisting on the dating of the Sutton Hoo burial ship and the use of gold coinage in the late Roman Empire. However his major published works were Volume VIII and X in the Roman Imperial Coinage series. Volume VIII, published in 1981, covered the period from the death of the Emperor Constantine in AD 337 to the accession of Valentinian in AD 364. Volume X, published in 1994, covered the period from the division of the Roman Empire in AD 395 to the accession of Anastasius in AD 491. He also completed two volumes on the Continental Celtic Coins in the British Museum and other collections left incomplete by the death of previous keeper Derek Allen, which were published in 1987 and 1990.

In 1974 he was promoted Deputy Keeper, and in 1983 Keeper, of the British Museum's coin and medal collection, a post he held until his retirement in 1990. A commemorative medal was struck to mark his retirement.

He died in 2000. He had married Patricia Bunford in 1961 and had a son and a daughter.

Honours and awards

gollark: I *can* do ARing for people, you know, even for things above 4d.
gollark: Or, for extra funlolz, rarer than golds.
gollark: *But* they'd be common as mints.
gollark: ```Mana courses through this very reflective, almost metallic egg, around which time is distorted. It produces a beautiful glow, and has a reddish gleam, although it is much smaller than the others and smells uncannily like cheese.```
gollark: Idea: an egg whose description combines *every keyword* of all rares.

References

  1. "John Kent". The Telegraph. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
  2. "JOHN KENT (28.9.1928 - 22.10.2000)" (PDF). Retrieved 25 December 2016.
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