The first step of the project aimed to gather all the material (i.e. coins) available for the study and forms the basis of the interpretation of the RoCCAA project. With COVID-19, geopolitical instabilities, and the closure of some museums severely affected the original schedule. Yet, the RoCCAA catalogue of coins gathers 1440 coins to date, comprising Roman coins and other coins from various issuers in order to study the impact of Roman coins on the overall monetary circulation of the Greater Armenian Kingdom.
Once the dataset had been finalised, interdisciplinary research combining numismatics, history, archaeology, statistical analysis, comparative analysis and Geographical Information System was undertaken to highlight patterns of monetary circulation.
In addition, to the collect of data, regional comparisons with Georgia, the region beyond the Germano-Danubian border of the Roman empire, and other areas of the Roman empire have been undertaken to analyse the singularity of the monetary circulation of ancient Armenia.
The results have been disseminated to different audiences combining scholars and public engagement. First of all, results have been communicated to scholars during national and international numismatic conferences (Oxford, AIEA online, Warsaw, Yerevan, Caen), as well as talks and lectures, especially at Wolfson College. Results will be also shared via five or six forthcoming and ongoing papers, and a monograph (in progress). A forthcoming Summer School in Georgia in September 2023 will participate to the dissemination of the results of the RoCCAA as well as sharing expertise. Published hoards have been entered into the Coin Hoards of the Roman empire online database, thereby extending the availability of the data to a larger audience.
Training sessions to PhD and postdoctoral students interested in Marie Słodowska-Curie application have been provided by the researcher with a view to sharing skills and knowhow. As an ambassador of MSCA, RoCCAA project has been presented at the national day of Marie Curie, organised by the Ministère de l’Enseignement supérieur et de la Recherche in France.
In a wider perspective, the Researcher participated to improve and sustain the position of junior and fixed term researchers within the Ashmolean Museum by representing them at the governing body committee of the Ashmolean Research Committee.
Lastly, public engagement has been part of the results via some talks and lectures (especially in the INALCO), among various fields, and an upcoming paper in a public engagement review in Archéologia.