See also: Jetton Jeton Jetsons Jetting Jettisons Jettison Jetty Jettisoned Jettisoning Jettatura Jetted Jett Jetter
1. Jettons (or casting counters) were used with a gridded table or cloth to aid in accounting because of the scarcity of pencil lead and paper
Jettons
2. Similar to an abacus, the Jettons were moved over the lines and spaces representing decimal units.
Jettons
3. Jettons are known from England, France, Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Italy, Portugal, Spain & probably other countries
Jettons
4. Originally "Jettons" would have been pebbles or pieces of pottery (the word calculate derives from Calx - pebble).
Jettons
5. Jettons or Reckoning Counters More correctly called, in English, Reckoning Counter
Jettons
6. The earliest known example of specially struck Jettons seem to be from mid 13th century France, and other examples are known from all over Europe.
Jettons
7. Only 12 jettons out of a total of about 500 in the Jamestown collection depict the Lion of St
Je, Jamestown
8. Jettons may be earn by trading an Imperial Currency to Zandjarl or participating Pankration
Jettons
9. Jettons were produced in copper alloy and used to perform calculations for accountancy
Jettons
10. Jettons were in common use from the 13th to 16th centuries
Jettons
11. The Ashmolean Museum has a very good collection of tokens and Jettons
Jettons
12. Jettons of late medieval and early modern date, predominantly from England, France, the Low Countries, and Germany (Nuremberg), were originally issued for accounting purposes but could also be used as petty cash.
Jettons
13. Jettons Grill has a large variety of flavorful and healthy dishes
Jettons
14. Jettons Inc is a Texas Domestic For-Profit Corporation filed On September 9, 1987
Jettons
15. Jettons are also obtainable by competing in Pankration battles.
Jettons
16. We headed down to Lewes Delaware prior to Hurricane Sandy to find some coins from the 1700s - and found them! Jettons they're called, trade tokens from aroun
Jettons
17. What does Jettons mean? Plural form of jetton
Jettons, Jetton
18. Most of the residents along Jetton Road did sell out at the time (including the Jettons), though the power plant never materialized
Jetton, Jettons
19. A List of Medals, Jettons, Tokens, &C: In Connection With Printers and the Art of Printing (Classic Reprint) [Blades, William] on Amazon.com
Jettons
20. A List of Medals, Jettons, Tokens, &C: In Connection With Printers and the Art of Printing (Classic Reprint)
Jettons
21. Broader term: Numismatics; Related term: Tokens; Used for: Jetons; Counting coins; Filed under: Jettons Des libertés de la Bourgogne d'après les jetons de ses états / (Autun : Imprimeries de Dejussieu et L
Jetons, Jettons
22. Nuremberg Jettons at the SBT Inside our numismatics collection is a set of tokens known as 'Nuremberg Jettons', which were an important part of commerce in the …
Jettons
23. A list of medals, Jettons, tokens, & c., in connection with printers and the art of printing 1869 [Hardcover] [Blades, William, ] on Amazon.com
Jettons
24. A list of medals, Jettons, tokens, & c., in connection with printers and the art of printing 1869 [Hardcover]
Jettons
25. The Ashmolean Museum has a very good collection of tokens and Jettons
Jettons
26. Jettons of late medieval and early modern date, predominantly from England, France, the Low Countries, and Germany (Nuremberg), were originally issued for accounting purposes but could also be used as petty cash.
Jettons
27. The top 5 object types are (as usual): Coins, Brooches, Buckles, Jettons and Mounts
Jettons
JETTONS [ˈjetn]
They also found use as a money substitute in games, similar to modern casino chips or poker chips. Thousands of different jetons exist, mostly of religious and educational designs, as well as portraits, the last of which most resemble coinage, somewhat similar to modern, non-circulation commemorative coins.
The lines and the spaces between the lines function like the wires or rods on an abacus. The place value is marked at the end. Jetons or jettons are tokens or coin -like medals produced across Europe from the 13th through the 17th centuries.
Being like a coin in terms of its properties, along with tokens, medals and medallions, jettons are items of ‘paranumismatica’. Our word ‘jetton’ (on the PAS database it is spelled with two ‘t’s) comes from ‘jeter’, meaning ‘to throw’ in French, and relates to the ‘casting’ of accounts.
Common reverses on French jettons: Triple-stranded cross fleuretty (left, DOR-0521C5); Double-stranded arcuate cross (right, SOM-0EBB6F). Copyrights: The Portable Antiquities Scheme; Somerset County Council; CC-BY licence) Note that many of the earlier types within the French series are of smaller size and bear an arcuate cross on their reverse.