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Deinomenid

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Posts posted by Deinomenid

  1. @Nikodeimos there's a specialist overstrike site that has a good number of your type of coin with the various understrikes shown if you click the coin (if known). I don't think it is currently taking new submissions, but may be wrong. My coin is there,  but listed as undertype  unknown.

    https://silver.knowledge.wiki/Special:BrowseData/Overstrike?title=Special%3ABrowseData%2FOverstrike&_search_Mint[0]=Gortyn

    Gortyn is one of their main sources -

     

     

    Screenshot 2024-05-11 at 20-25-55 Greek Overstrikes Database - SILVER.png

    • Like 1
  2. 3 hours ago, Nerosmyfavorite68 said:

     

    What's the gunk on the reverse of the Artemis

     

    Gunk?! That’s called added character!

    Also it went wholly unmentioned in the description so it might be a figment of our less refined than NAC imaginations -

     vine-tendril with bunch of grapes. For similar reverse type. cf. Traite II, 2449 and pl. CLXVIII, 2 (eagle standing r.).

  3. @Nikodeimos welcome! I completely agree with you on the enchanting qualities of Cretan coins. Would that there were more! The Europa or Britomartis ones like  yours are fantastic. There's something about them that not even Becker could reproduce.

    Here's a Gortnya to keep yours company -

    Gortyna AR Drachm.  4th century BC. Head of Persephone to right, hair bound with barley wreath, wearing triple pendant earring and necklace / ΓΟΡΤΙΝΙΩΝ, Cretan bull standing to right, head reverted.  

    4001-28-173-1_orig.jpg.4bfb38d22315d16c44a96efb385d8b13.jpg

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  4. 10 minutes ago, John Conduitt said:

    The perception is based on what you collect

    I am talking about Greek coins so yes, as I said above. In the past though there were some  huge sales by British houses of British collections of Greek coins, so fashions in collecting, disposable wealth when pips were being made to squeak etc  might have had a role. Glendinings famous sales etc.  Anyway...

     

    1 minute ago, DonnaML said:

    In my opinion, trying to view items in the Museum's numismatic collection on its website is one of the more horrendously user-unfriendly experiences I've had.

    It's embarrassing, especially when  you have to start guessing what  obscure spelling of a mint's name they are using! Or toggling between imaged and no image for a given  selection, just to see how many are not digitized. I also just found out (no doubt I am the last to  know)  that there are so-called reserve collections at several of the major UK coin depositories (some call them museums), in the case  I learned of today of many tens of thousands of Roman coins (ha not talking Greek!) wholly without  notes, images, descriptions etc. 

    • Like 1
  5. 7 minutes ago, DonnaML said:

    must we tug our forelocks to the famous German and  Swiss houses

    You mustn't! I would not, as there is  no direct link that I am aware of. Parochially, I would far rather the strength and breadth of British research, knowledge and collecting be reflected in towering depth and breadth of offering, cataloging expertise etc in UK houses. This is all in reference (on a Greek forum) to the Greek parts of auctions and  Greek research, collections etc. I know little of the offerings in Roman, though am fully aware of some breathtaking offerings  in UK coinage by  domestic houses.

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  6. Ranking is perception to an extent, of value, breadth, rarity or consistency of offering. No-one mentioned  Morton and Eden, who had an exceptional sale  recently, truly special, but they rarely do it. Using this above house as an example, in the few  minutes since my last  post I've just gone through some of their Sicilian coins and am shocked at them. Some howlers. That don't even exist.  (Plus curiously, they offer no bid unsold Roma coins.) I genuinely feel terrible for  bidders.

     

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  7. 7 hours ago, Heliodromus said:

    "The Coin Cabinet"

    I just looked them up and they have an excellent new (?) angle in provenance reporting.

    They are selling someone's mostly very recent collection as the "Euclidean Collection".  And naming as provenance the err "Euclidean Collection"! I despair.

    https://auctions.thecoincabinet.com/lots/view/4-DJRDD8/lucania-velia-ar-didrachm

    Just one of many examples,  many of which are also recycled Den of Antiquity coins, if indeed recycled. It does seem a shame that given the towering academic work of British researchers  since the 1860s in in the field, some extraordinary collections etc etc that there isn't a similarly ranked UK numismatic auction house, with all due  respect to Spink, Baldwins, Noonans etc.

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  8. At last my avatar has a  use! How  I have waited for this moment 😀

    The reverse of this  coin (wish I could write and mean my coin) features  just that. There are  only a handful known/

    From an auction  blurb - 4-litrae, about 406, AV 3.47 g

    ΣΥΡΑΚΟΣΙOΝ around the rim of a circular shield, at the center of the raised boss of which is a facing gorgoneion. Rev. Ephebe moving left, nude, leaning slightly forward with his left foot turned outward towards the viewer and his right balanced on his toes, his left hand held behind him as a counterweight while using a strigil, held in his right, apparently to clean off a mixture of oil and dust from his left knee. C. Boehringer, "Ehrenrettung einer syrakusanischen Goldmünze", FlorNum p. 74, 1 (V1/R1). C. Boehringer, "Zu Finanzpolitik und Münzprägung des Dionysios von Syrakus", Essays Thompson pl. 38, 11 (same obverse die). De Luynes 1402 (same obverse die). Extremely rare, one of only eight specimens known, of which only three are in private hands. With an extraordinarily lifelike depiction of an athlete cleaning himself after exercising.

    image00035-orig-orig_orig1.jpg.3a94ed7cb870f1475e99c5a7550f5b95.jpg

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  9. 15 minutes ago, Anaximander said:

    seller is anonymous

    But Catalan and presumably filthy rich. If this is a billionaire, based on value, there aren't that many of them there, but Thyssen's widow  springs to  mind, and she's on all sorts of relevant boards. Seems an obvious  choice were it not for the fact that she should donate them given that. Also got to be a megalomaniacal billionaire as  the Credits page is empty. She is also an art dealer.

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  10. @idesofmarch01 those are breathtaking. Many congratulations.

    The only slight thing is I'm fairly sure that's not what Apollo looked like. I am told this is actually him on the left -

     

    Screenshot_3-5-2024_14133_(1).jpeg.d0f58f9a37b8d813ed4ddd2ce286605c.jpeg

    DUROTRIGES, Uninscribed issues, silver Stater, disjointed head of Apollo, rev. disjointed horse left.

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  11. Thematically similar but not Maussolos -

    Satraps of Caria, Hidreios (351-334 BC), drachm, laureate head of Apollo facing slightly to right, rev., ΙΔΡΙΕΩΣ, Zeus Labraundos standing right holding labrys and spear.

     

    4483661-1693493008_orig.jpg.692fceff4b5c0b35a011fe5213bca224.jpg

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  12. I was late for a game against Carnegie Mellon once and ran across town (centralish Pittsburgh) and ran past this. Nearly thought I had fallen through a gap  in the time/space continuum as I had no idea it was there. Been in a couple of  times since. Well worth a look.

    soldiers-and-sailors.jpg.ca1318d282a0276c7ea0823c9be8c5c2.jpg

     

     

     

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  13. 2 hours ago, Bonshaw said:

    It is just one additional way to preserve provenance

    I thought this was a Roma  joke at first.🙂

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  14. As did all the Roma points! It's been a strange  process.  Limped on way longer than I thought likely.

  15. 12 hours ago, Hesiod said:

    He is unfortunately deceased

    I had  no idea. Thank you for  pointing  it out. I saw some  of  his coins already being resold by Waddell  with  his dates but assumed an error.

    Ex: Dr. Kaya Sayar( 1933-2024) collection etc

    • Like 1
  16. 2 hours ago, wuntbedruv said:

    The incuse eagle head on the reverse appears similarly on coins of Abdera,

    Just to steer completely away from Abdera, I went through May and there's nothing. The closest is May 125 but the dotting  is completely different.

    IMG_2565bg.jpg.d894d5ee9d26241e132d37d11906586e.jpg   IMG_2566.jpg.521c7f245f0382d96a19c9dee1e58880.jpg

     

    Kunker  just did a huge sale of what  you'd expect to show up re the Lycian (very generally speaking) style Pegasos and there was nothing  like your coin. Ditto the  obvious eagle suspects from Elis, to Kyme to Sinope etc.  I know this answer isn't worthy of a postcard and usually I'd start worrying at a mashup but  Cilicia/Lycia etc etc do throw up some  unique coins. And stylistically it fits with some of these from that sale.

    https://www.numisbids.com/n.php?search=pegasos&p=sale&sid=7708&s=b

    Long shot, but the man who sold a huge number of these types in this sale might be able to help as he's supposedly a true expert. Can't hurt to ask them. That is  of course if it's not id'ed here or elsewhere before.

    Last thought from me (no doubt thankfully!) is that area  did produce coins like yours with the dotted lines within the incuse AND being  inside a frame, which is  unusual. Like this framed dotted line.

    https://www.numisbids.com/n.php?p=lot&sid=7708&lot=55

    • Like 1
  17. I buy quite a few  ancients books from Edizioni D'Andrea and they often  kindly throw in one for free. This  time they were exceptionally generous, but the book  is way outside anything  I know and rather than let  it sit here, I'm happy to send it free to any US address. I'll eat the record of the address immediately on sending, in case of privacy fears etc.

    No  idea if this is the right place to  post this. But it's  post-medieval. There is no catch, but it is in Italian. Still in its wrapper.

    unlongo.jpg.c1378d2c22c779189acfd2dea03b6fbf.jpg

     

     

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  18. 23 hours ago, Furryfrog02 said:

    How rare is a coin and how do we really determine that rarity? 

    I honesty don't know but Hoover guides sometimes quote someone who did  various studies to try to put  numbers to it. I don't know how controversial this  is, but for what it is worth, and I've seen this quoted across Greek and Roman (Houghton was a Seleucid specialist if that makes any difference, but this quote is from Hoover Sicily) -

     

    Screenshot_30-4-2024_2086_.jpeg.d36e95cef7524376250fdcd72d1423d6.jpeg

     

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  19. Here's a Nile Club dirk, the club being of the surviving officers of the  British fleet at the Battle  of the Nile.

    From the  Billy Ruffian, aka  HMS  Bellerophon. One of the most illustrious of the third rate ships of the line,  Napoleon surrendered aboard her amongst other things (things including  Battle of Trafalgar, Battle of the Glorious First of June, raider/escort against the US, Russia etc.)

    cwqqwfwfwq.jpg.14f6917d5a811f6265a8f9072401f923.jpg

     

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  20. The lady I dealt with left very recently,  I kept sending money to old bank accounts as I can't keep up with their changes and the superexpensive rare coin  I have been following (aka droning on about)as  I watch pedigrees be wiped off records was just shown to be likely glued together with no hint of that, and sold for 20% of prior estimate. Not the actions of a company soliciting long term relations with high-end collectors (not that I am  one). Photos stolen from a forum member's post on another forum, with apologies.

    The cabinets  point  is very interesting!

     

    001RomaNum_119n_117.jpg.d957379b689fe3014410c8e23fcb14cd.jpg.4a0c2f1a31644893afe0a016f91ed359.jpg

    PyxosZoom2.thumb.jpg.4a1aa8b3b253e51a583b3206d3fa3ee5.jpg.53b1978f98a43953488c78323cc8a52f.jpg

     

    PyxosZoom1.thumb.jpg.2ba6c589d2838af8e16e9e1f7df37453.jpg.110b4d51a858043ebe2ab9a5d4475cf4.jpg

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  21. 59 minutes ago, maridvnvm said:

    Have I gone barking mad?

    They are usually quite open to queries, and it would be fantastic  if you can give them better information. JD Hill heads up research still I think.

    Or here- bmresearch@britishmuseum.org

    • Like 1
  22. That’s incredible!

    Cyprus is so hard to collect well and with good information. I need a “deep jealousy” emoji.

     

    Here's a Kition that fits the table-

    CYPRUS, Kition. Pumiathon. Circa 362/1-312 BC. AR Tetradrachm (24mm, 17.38 g, 12h). In the name and types of Alexander III. Struck circa 325-320 BC.Head of Herakles right, wearing lion skin / Zeus Aëtophoros seated left; monogram in left

     

    B170557F-4689-4BE3-BAF3-1049A715A632.png.621e33ada2de3a1657fcbb434c59ed25.png

     

    And here’s a Kition from only 100 years earlier, showing just how strange the place was at least in presentation. Aramaic and a king with a very nonGreek name.

     

    Baalmelek II. Circa 425/0-400 BC. AR Stater 22.5mm, 11.14g. Herakles, wearing lion skin, in fighting stance right, holding [club and bow] / Lion attacking stag crouching right; L B’LML[K] (in Aramaic) above; all in dotted square within incuse square. 

    70803AA7-6B4F-4D50-A6DA-3CCF29EB7FCF.png.c6f7a2975ad48aac04f27a5165602fbb.png

    • Like 6
  23. Plato visited Syracuse 3 or more likely 4 times, under Dionysius, Dionysius the Younger and Dion, with whom he was very close. 
    This coin is highly likely contemporary (it as close as can be) with his first visit. 

    Syracuse, Ae drachm, c. 380 BC, [ΣΥΡΑ], head of Athena left wearing olive-wreathed Corinthian helmet, rev., sea star between two dolphins, 33.8g

    F02975B6-BFE3-4712-BCC4-3043F70AABBE.jpeg.2ed23b389d29144e4a4de9316e07edb6.jpeg

     

     

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  24. @KenDorney Are you sure that's a Becker? It doesn't look like it from my admittedly rather beat-up old  copy of the Hill book. There are quite a few differences between your coin and this. I'm aware of the irony of suggesting this is a fake of a fake! 🙂

     

    unnamedrerg.jpg.97658eac8dfc7ca6397b525bc5047824.jpg

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