Catherine Eagleton

Curator of Modern Money

Coins, paper money, tokens, credit cards, and other money-related objects from the last 300 years

Department: Coins and Medals

Telephone: +44 (0)20 7323 8607
Email: ceagleton @ thebritishmuseum.ac.uk

Catherine Eagleton joined the British Museum in 2004, having previously worked at the Science Museum, London, and volunteered at the Whipple Museum of the History of Science, Cambridge.

The modern money collection numbers more than 150,000 objects and several thousand new objects are added to the collection every year. As well as looking after the collection, Catherine is currently working on several exhibitions, managing the Money in Africa project, and researching the Sarah Sophia Banks collection of coins and tokens. She is also interested in medieval history, and sometimes works on objects from earlier time periods, particularly scientific instruments, manuscripts, and books.

Current British Museum projects

Previous British Museum projects

Wealth of Africa: 4000 years of money and trade, exhibition and associated educational programmes and events

External fellowships/ honorary positions/ membership of professional bodies

Web manager, e-journal editor, and board member for ICOMON

Affiliated Research Scholar, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, Cambridge University

Member of Editorial Advisory Board for e-journal Marginalia

Publications

Most recent publications

C. Eagleton, Money: A History, with J. Williams, (London, British Museum Press, forthcoming 2007)

C. Eagleton, ‘1343 and all that: previously unnoticed documents relating to England’s new gold and silver coins’, with R. Kelleher, British Numismatic Journal, 77 (2007), forthcoming.

C. Eagleton, ‘Collections and Projections: Henry Sutton’s Paper Instruments’, with B. Jardine, Journal of the History of Collections 17.1(2005), pp. 1 – 13.

C. Eagleton, “Museums and Medieval Material Culture”, in Marginalia, 1 (2005), available online at http://www.marginalia.co.uk

C. Eagleton, Instruments of Mystery, edited with P. Boner, (Cambridge, Whipple Museum and Cambridge Latin Therapy Group, 2004)