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Theodosius

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Posts posted by Theodosius

  1. I have found that many volumes of Davenport are available on Amazon. Some are reasonable and some are expensive. So I've reordered some more volumes.

    I've also found the Wikipedia article on "Thaler" to be a really good overview and a good place to get started if you're interested in the series.

    John

    • Like 2
  2. Hi Donna,

    I have one of the Davenport series: European Crowns 1700-1800. It is a great reference book but not something you would read cover to cover. He provides a brief narrative of the history of each of the countries and some information about the various people illustrated on the coins. I have three more of the series on order.

    I also have the Krause world coin series books, which are also good reference books.

    John

     

    • Like 1
    • Yes 1
  3. Hello world coin collectors.

    I am starting to get more serious about collecting world coins, especially larger European silver coins from 1450-1800. I like artistic, animals, city views and historical themes.

    What are some good, entertaining books to go with that area? They don't need to be coin books specifically.

    Thanks, John

    ErzholdLeopoldARTalerAustria.jpg.37c0d35ac7d9992e573542ec5e1e33ae.jpg

    AUSTRIA, ERZHERZOG LEOPOLD AR TALER

    Davenport 3338b, Very Fine, 42.3mm, 28.43 grams, 1632, Hall mint

     

    • Like 11
  4. Bake it in the oven at 200° for an hour. Then store it in an airtight container like a Ziploc bag with a desiccator bag in it. Otherwise it is likely to keep coming back until your whole coin is destroyed. You can bake your desiccator bag at the same time as the coin. The best ones have a little color indicator that shows when they are saturated. You can also buy very cheap digital hygrometers on Amazon for a few dollars. I bought a set of 20 of them and keep them in each of my air tight containers along with my infected coins. It really helps to have numerical measurements of the humidity of the environment you're storing them. Otherwise it's just a guess. Usually 40% humidity or less is safe. BD will be active at 50% or more. Good luck.

    John

    • Like 1
  5. That is really cool that you discovered that it is a plate coin! It is hard to believe that any plate coin would be sold in a group lot. If that had been an imperial Roman coin you can bet that the provenance would not have fallen through the cracks.

    There are just not that many people interested in Greek bronzes it seems. Look how many more posts there are in Roman imperial than there are in Greek on Numisforums.

    John

     

    • Like 6
  6. Boy that is a difficult one to judge. The style looks correct. The recessed areas still are fairly sharp, unlike a lot of casts. The surfaces look okay. If real I'd say it's worth at least $300. This is a pretty scarce type that a lot of people would like to have. I don't know if Barry Murphy is a member here but I'd be curious what his opinion is.

    It's a very attractive piece no matter what so I would definitely hold on to it.

    John

    • Like 4
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