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VII. Joh. Christoph. Olearius in his cited Specimen of the universal numismatic subject.
VIII. Carol. Patinus in his Introduction to the history of coins, Chapter 24 in its entirety.
IX. Joh. Seldenus in his Numismatic Library, or list of authors who have written on ancient coins, etc., joined to his book on coins, published in London 1675, in quarto, and in Edinburgh 1685, in quarto.
X. Burc. Gotth. Struvius in his Library of ancient coins, Chapter 1, Section 3 through 11.
XI. Christoph. Arnoldi enumerates physicians who are clear writers on the subject of numismatics in his Epistle, which he prefixed to Rare coins of Greater Greece, published by Prosper Parisius in the year 1592, and reprinted in Nuremberg under the care of Joh. Ge. Volckhamer in 1683, in folio. Compare regarding those who have written catalogs of authors on coins the cited Struvius, Numismatic Library, Chapter 1, Section 1.
Regarding coin cabinets and treasure chambers (Germans call them Münz-Cabinet and Kunst-Kammern), we consider the following in the principal parts of Europe, and especially in Germany, to be worth noting:
I. In ENGLAND, the Royal Westminster cabinet in London, and the one in Oxford must be mentioned.