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Coinmaster

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Everything posted by Coinmaster

  1. Hi all, what was your best buy in 2022? Cheap or expensive doesn't matter, please just show the coin you're most happy about! I'm very happy with this coin from Trajanus, which I bought for 275,- Euro via ma-shops.com. What I like is that both front and backside have enough details and that all the letters are readable. It's about my most expensive coin, but I think it's worth the price for this famous emperor. Background info: https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces253046.html and https://numismatics.org/ocre/id/ric.2.tr.151. PS: I got a (maybe stupid) question about the text on the front side. The letters are: IMP TRAIANO AVG GER DAC P M TR P COS V P P, what's translated as: Imperator Traiano Augustus, Germanicus, Dacicus, Pontifex Maximus, Tribunicia Potestate, Consul Quintum, Pater Patriae. But I thought the name of the emperor is Traian (Trajan) or Trajanus, not Traiano (which seems to me Italian instead of Latin). Shouldn't it translate into: Imperator Traianus Optimus, Augustus, Germanicus, (etc.)?
  2. PS: this site might be of interest as well: https://www.mittelaltermuenzen.com/the-coins.
  3. Hi all, soms years ago I bought the 'Droysens Allgemeiner Historischer Handatlas 1886'. It has beautiful maps, including from medieval times. Fortunately for you, the maps are also online available via this link: http://www.maproom.org/00/08/index.php?fbclid=IwAR1gacS1F0qq3CND9xY_eZ50fMiH9-Bh_aOSHas7J4v8ftPKC44d-N6wSdc. My favorite is plate 26/27, with alle the German states in detail, including The Netherlands (where I live): http://maproom.org/00/08/present.php?m=0026&fbclid=IwAR2YF-n2KfpTfejAR_f5OScZ-kDyW6xicN3XFCzTa29W99i-jKYWLO2SR8Y. You can zoom in on the map. Many of these areas from bishops, counts and dukes produced their own coins. My favorite county is that from Kleve (1202-1347). I recently wrote this article about some medieval coins from Kleve in where I made clear coins with text 'NOSNEN' and 'HOSNEN' are to be attributed to the (currently Dutch) city Huissen: https://www.academia.edu/87244877/_2022_De_muntplaats_Nosnen_in_het_graafschap_Kleef.
  4. A friend of mine created these interactive maps on my request and with my help. Perhaps it's of use to someone. Anglo Saxon mints: https://detectoramateur.maps.arcgis.com/apps/dashboards/fe39b0dd6763400eb0c2f6efb44b97b4 Dutch/Belgian mints: https://detectoramateur.maps.arcgis.com/apps/dashboards/90e064b134534790b1c8a1e7f5fdc6a9
  5. Yes, indeed! An impressive denarius, thanks! https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces247839.html
  6. I found a denarius from Trajanus with 58 characters (https://numismatics.org/ocre/id/ric.2.tr.237) and from Hadrianus with 64 characters (source: https://www.acsearch.info/search.html?id=1532185)! HADRIEN (117-138), AR denier, 117, Rome. Droit : IMP CAES TRAIAN HADRIAN OPT AVG GER DAC B. l., drapé, cuirassé à droite. Revers : PARTHIC DIVI TRAIAN AVG F P M TR P COS PP Trajan et Hadrien en toge, debout face à face, tenant un globe entre eux. Ref.: BMC 237, 2; RIC 2c. 2,77g. Rare. Patiné. See also: https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces254576.html
  7. The 'winner'! One of the best examples I could find online (source: https://www.acsearch.info/search.html?id=175066).
  8. Many thanks for all replies! @shanxi I believe your example count about 85 characters. @Spaniard indeed this is a great example of a denarius. I recently bought this beautiful denarius from Trajanus, that count even 48 characters! Would that be a record for the denarius? It's quite a puzzle to figure this out, see: https://www.forumancientcoins.com/numiswiki/view.asp?key=ERIC - TRAJAN. @Ocatarinetabellatchitchix, your example with 96 characters seems indeed the winner, thank you!
  9. Hi all, I find the text on Roman coins fascinating and wonder: what is the longest text and/or title on a Roman coin? I think these are two questions: 1. most characters 2. most/longest titles @DonnaMLperhaps you know this answer? Perhaps it's this one from Trajanus (RIC 681): IMP CAES NER TRAIANO OPTIMO AVG GER DAC PARTHICO PM TR P COS VI PP Perhaps you're familiar already with this great site: https://chat.openai.com/chat. The answer I received was: Not sure which RIC-number this is, so I don't have a picture for this example. But the example from Trajanus seems better. Any remarks, additions? Thank you!
  10. @Severus Alexander@SimonW and all others, many thanks for these great references! I'm a big fan off acsearch myself and helped many detectorists with identifying their medieval and other coins. It's very useful when searching with only a few readable letters on a coin. Three additions to the above links are: http://dirtyoldbooks.com/roman/id/ and https://www.forumancientcoins.com/moonmoth/ancientcoins.html and https://www.forumancientcoins.com/numiswiki/view.asp?key=ERIC - How To Use This Book
  11. Many thanks for the nice replies! Let me know if you have any questions whatsoever (determination, etc.). My main knowledge and period of interest is the 12th and 13th century in where population grows, cities and markets emerge and coins are made available to most people. This Facebook group is nice to see what medieval coins are found in The Netherlands by metal detectorists: https://www.facebook.com/groups/853231181422839.
  12. My main interest is in Roman silver coins. For now mainly from Augustus onwards. But my question was just in general. There is an overwhelming lot of websites, so I am just curious what kind of sites you're using (for whatever purpose: information, buying, research, etc.) and what you think might be relevant for others. Nothing more, nothing less. Have a nice Sunday!
  13. Hi all, This is my personal Academia site with my articles, mostly about medieval coinage: https://independent.academia.edu/AntonCruysheer. For anyone who's doing research about coins in/from The Netherlands I wrote this English article with many tips: https://www.academia.edu/85901040/_2022_A_method_for_coin_research_in_The_Netherlands 'Because many coin researchers of Dutch finds origins from outside The Netherlands, I thought it would be helpful to point out the locations as to where to find these coins. The places you can find coins I divided in six categories: coin and archeological repositories, museum collections and platforms, social media platforms, determination fora, and personal websites, auction houses and (private) collections, numismatic and archeological publications. - Enjoy your research!'
  14. If you could share one website tip on Roman coins (beside this great forum :-)) what would it be? My tip to share is this great website with superb background info about Roman emperors and relatives, etc.: https://web.archive.org/web/20210921115830/http://www.roman-emperors.org/alphin.htm#a-inx.
  15. My favorite portret is this beautiful Maximinus Thrax denarius I recently bought. Very happy with it!
  16. What is it? Never seen this anonymous type!
  17. Ah, many thanks @LONGINUS, both the welcome and explanation. It looks impressive! You could make a living out of that creativity, but it seems you already do, great job! 😉
  18. Hi all, I'm new here and just registered after reading this great post. @dougsmit, interesting post about the Severans. I'd like to own one day a nice denarius from Pertinax. What a great story about this son of a formal slave to reach the highest rank of emperor. @LONGINUS, what a beautiful display of coins. I'd like that very much to do also with my collection. Is there a template you used for this? Is this something you could share, perhaps a link? I'm jealous about your beautiful coin from Orbiana! I started a Roman coin collection just a while ago, but with this below coin I'm very happy about. Although the back side could be better, it has the most beautiful portret of Maximinus Thrax (235-238) I've seen so far. 🙂 Another recent purchase I'm happy about is the below denarius from Domitian (86-96). Both coins are even more beautiful in hand. Hmm, this all sounds like I developed a serious new addiction.. any cures for this?
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