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Factor

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Posts posted by Factor

  1. 23 hours ago, seth77 said:

    I have actually noticed different these last few months. In fact Jerusalem/Aelia Capitolina is one of the cities I meant that I see getting high prices regardless of emperor or condition in the auctions I follow. Mints from Judaea, Samaria, the Decapolis etc. seem to be more available now than last summer for instance.

    City coins of Judaea, Arabia and Decapolis are my main area of interest and I follow their trends very closely. A major factor in their pricing was tightening of the regulations by Israeli Antiquities Authority over the last several years, making legal ancient coins collecting in Israel very hard and causing many people to give up or significantly slow down. For example, to bring a coin to Israel that was legally purchased abroad on an auction or from a dealer you need to receive an import permit from the AA, for every coin. Otherwise it will be confiscated and you will not get it back. If you want to sell your legally purchased and registered with AA coin, you can only do it with a licensed antiquities dealer, no collector to collector sales. There is of course a black market but people just don't want the hustle.

    There are several prominent collectors who don't live in Israel and who are not affected by these changes, so the prices of rare and exceptional coins remain strong but more common and average grade coins are often pretty much impossible to sell, and when they do sell it's usually for a fraction of what they brought a decade or two ago. 

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  2. Several days ago they also listed on VCoins a crude tourist type copy of a Hasmonean prutah, and when I messaged them about it they asked me why I think it is not real 🤡. Their authenticity expert is probably on vacation 😂.

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  3. Very nice group! My area of interest is provincial coinage of southern Levant, and here are some of Lucilla coins from that region.

    PXL_20240123_140012899.jpg.2626d187be63a0c2d71dc9d1b8223ba1.jpg

    PXL_20240123_140051637.jpg.3e81c663d952c9cb8bd85ff758b7dea1.jpg

    First from the left is Caesarea Maritima, same type as Michael illustrated. It is quite rare, particularly compared to other Caesarea coins. Next one is from Gerasa in Decapolis. I am working on corpus of all known coins of Gerasa and I am aware of only four specimens of this type. The next is from Aelia Capitolina, probably relatively early type with Lucius Versus on the obverse. The forth is from Nysa-Scythopolis and the fifth from Pella in the Decapolis. The portraits on these two coins are remarkably similar, suggesting the dies were probably created by the same artist which actually makes sense since these two cities were very close geographically. 

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  4. Absolutely not. Even if the mounting is very careful and the coin is not damaged in the process, it will certainly see some wheat as the item is used. Why anyone would enjoy destroying a piece of history is beyond my understanding. 

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  5. Rivergod from the middle of desert 😀

    ARABIA, Adraa. Commodus. 177-192 CE. Æ (30mm, 16.69 g, 12h). Struck circa 177-180 CE. Laureate, draped, and cuirassed young bust right / River-god Hieromyces reclining left, leaning on overturned urn from which water flows, and holding reed; behind, Tyche seated left on rock, head right, holding cornucopia. Spijkerman 6; Meshorer, City-Coins 227; RPC IV.3 Online 6539. Green surfaces, earthen highlights. Near VF.

    From the Dr. Jay M. Galst Collection.

     

    875_2(1).jpg.6f0d8aa102f3e8795f288b99bc84b9ac.jpg

     

     

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  6. I am collecting provincials, so most of my coins are rather ugly and relatively scarce, especially compared to imperial issues. Here is one of my recent acquisitions. Caesarea Paneas, Julia Soaemias. Meshorer 55, Sofaer 40. Just one example of this type was known, now in museum. This one is second.

    PXL_20230810_042507558.jpg.efbb5284c132325ac7bc811870528c97.jpg

    PXL_20230810_042520768.jpg.b387de8b1f0e2460d2de12eb416dd9ab.jpg

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  7. Honestly I doubt the auction house or the consigner will see any money from this sale. The price is absolutely ridiculous, and the high bidder is very unlikely to actually pay, regardless of whether the bid was intentional. I knew a guy who used to bid few times the realistic estimate on literally every coin he wanted. He won them often but rarely paid the bills. Obviously he was banned from the auctions but immediately registered new accounts with fake addresses and kept doing that for years! I didn't hear from him for a while so I don't know if he continues with this habit. 

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  8. I received the coins I won on Saturday. The more interesting of the two is this large bronze of Herennius Etruscus from Caesarea Maritima: 

    PXL_20230612_0334534472.jpg.22cd758904cfb62eb58d51e28b42ce22.jpg

    PXL_20230612_0334284242.jpg.34d4f9853ce863e6c4ca5cd982b37ee5.jpg

     

    The coin is rather rare, there are just five in RPC and this is the only one ever auctioned, as far as I know. What can you see when you compare my photos with these from previous sale of this coin back in 2018?

    Screenshot_20230613-230547.png.b29bf05cd48e537b31c7213656d8e559.png

    Screenshot_20230613-2306562.png.eb4f7be1558e658afd2832bfd04bb344.png

    There were clear corrosion pits on the obverse (look at the chin) that magically disappeared over the years 😀. The surface looks quite natural, only under magnification I can spot areas that are a bit darker than the background. Whoever did this repair did very good job. Generally I am against any tampering with coin, such as tooling or smoothing, however in this particular case I am okay with what they did. I also think the filling was done with some kind of plaster that can be removed if needed. The appearance of the coin was significantly improved, without irreversible modifications. What is your opinion on such repairs?

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  9. I really like this coin, despite having a hole it is one of the best examples of this scarce type. 

    Antoninus Pius, August 138 - 7 March 161 A.D., Philadelphia, Decapolis, Bronzespace2.gifAE 27, RPC IV online T6636 (9 spec.); Spijkerman 17; SNG ANS 1387; BMC Arabia, p. 39, 9 & pl. VI, 7; Rosenberger 18; Sofaer pl. 160, 20

    philadelphia.jpg.1cb4f2780eb90578f0e9dd2b25890128.jpg

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  10. The die sharing phenomenon was not limited to Asia Minor. My friend Yoav Farhi and I just coauthored a paper in Israel Numismatic Research discussing die links between cities Gaza and Raphia in Judaea: https://www.academia.edu/95379856/Farhi_and_Kaplun_2022_Gaza_and_Raphia_under_Commodus_Another_Numismatic_Connection_INR_17

    I cannot share the whole paper here due to copyright, however if someone is interested let me know, I can send it directly. 

    Gaza also briefly shared a set of dies with Eleutheropolis: https://www.uni-muenster.de/Ejournals/index.php/ozean/article/view/3670/3647

     

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  11. Summary of my communication with this seller about a coin I paid for several months ago:

    1) Thank you for payment, I will send it in few days.

    2) (after two weeks) I am expecting to receive it from another country (!), in just two weeks.

    3) (after several weeks) Another dealer got it (!) but I bought it back (!), will send next week.

    4) (few more weeks) It got lost on the way to be shipped.

    I think average kindergartener can come with better excuses. 

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