Activities for this chapter
- discuss ancient minting process: http://www.greek-coins.net/making-ancient-coins/, watch mini-mint video:
- try to figure out three possible origins of the dollar sign from a Spanish peso--"piece of eight" and a Spanish real: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_dollar, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollar_sign
- discuss angel coins, "They have in England a coin that bears the figure of an angel, but that's insculped upon..." The Merchant of Venice Act 2, Scene 7): https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_touch, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touch_piece, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angel_(coin), http://findingshakespeare.co.uk/shakespeares-world-in-100-objects-number-60-an-elizabethan-gold-angel, http://digitalcommons.colby.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2420&context=cq,
also excerpt from book on the royal touch in the Book of Common Prayer and use of angel coin: https://books.google.com/books?id=5wc3CwAAQBAJ&pg=PA195&lpg=PA195&dq=royal+touch+book+of+common+prayer&source=bl&ots=7P-7DIPK0u&sig=TkuS-srljq2q6FyVOiq0zhHhUWE&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjigui9tODMAhVM82MKHVuXDD8Q6AEIHzAB#v=onepage&q=royal%20touch%20book%20of%20common%20prayer&f=false
- make shrinky dink replica of an angel coin or any coin in circulation 1600-1850
Links for this chapter
- Free membership and free ancient coins for students from the American Numismatic Association: Children who earn three A's in their coursework will receive an ancient coin and a one-year membership in the ANA (homeschoolers are encouraged to apply). Children may also complete a variety of activities in order to earn more ancient and early American copper coins: https://www.money.org/young-numismatists
- Free ancient coins for teachers: Teachers may apply to this program in order to receive ancient coins for their students (it is restricted to Latin teachers in public schools, however, there may be a way for other educators to get ancient coins at a discount): http://ancientcoinsforeducation.org
- Quick history of gold coins: http://www.numismaster.com/ta/inside_numis.jsp?page=history-gold-coins
- Coins in Elizabethan England: http://www.elizabethan.org/compendium/6.html
- Local coin and stamp shop--it might be nice to visit: http://www.bjstampsandcoins.com/#!about-us/cjg9
- Site on Italian Renaissance, includes a unit on Renaissance coin collecting: http://italianrenaissanceresources.com
- A History of the World in 100 Objects, a piece of eight: http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/a_history_of_the_world/objects.aspx#80
What we did
We brainstormed a bit about possible show and tell projects. First the kids wrote down five "impossible" things they would like to do, things that they would do if money, strength, and time were not an object. Some suggestions were: build a house, travel to a foreign country, discover an archaeological site, make a canoe, forge a sword, write a novel, be president of a country. Next we brainstormed doable but ambitious projects for the year: invent something, forge something (there is an open forge on the east side of town), experience a tea ceremony, interview someone from a foreign country, build an earth oven, make a historical costume, visit an archaeological or colonial site (we discussed the Sears-Kay ruins, the Pueblo Grande museum, and out-of-the-way ghost towns), write a short story (and get it published), learn glass-blowing, make moccasins or shoes, make something out of leather, visit local bronze casting works, get a pen pal, start a coin collection, make soap, make bobbin lace, learn food preservation techniques, cultivate yeast and make bread with it. Finally, we brainstormed some easy projects that they could do when they are not up to doing something big: minecraft buildings, see a movie or read a book and report on it, drawings, sculpey jewelry, cook a recipe, research something and report on it.Also, I meant to ask them to write down things they like to do: play, watch TV, play Minecraft, draw, write stories, put on skits, make YouTube videos, train animals, explore, visit new places, go camping. And I meant to ask them what sorts of things they are interested in about the past: weapons, jewelry, make-up, medicine, music, clothes, battles, literature, food, gardening, technology, science, animal domestication, food preservation.
We discussed rules: each child should work about two hours a week on the project but will only do a show-and-tell every other week, kids can work as teams, projects can be long-term—just be prepared to discuss the progress being made when it’s their turn to do show-and-tell, sometimes projects don’t work out or are complete failures—don’t stress, just discuss what was attempted and why it didn’t work out.
We also tried to discover the visual clues to possible origins of the US dollar sign in a picture of a Spanish real, and a verbal clue from the word "peso" which is short for "peso de ocho," or in English "piece of eight," so-called because it was worth eight reales. We discussed the famous mine of Potosi and the dangers of working there.
We didn't have time to make an angel coin, some kids took the image and shrinky dink plastic to make at home. The ritual for the King's Healing in England can be found in this edition of The Book of Common Prayer:
And here is the part of the ritual where the king would place an angel coin around the neck of the person suffering from scrofula:
Finished shrinky dink angel coins:
A show-and-tell project--quartz pounded into tiny pieces!


