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JAZ Numismatics

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Everything posted by JAZ Numismatics

  1. I'm glad I'm not the only one that buys a coin just because someone started a thread about it!
  2. Post any and all coins with Christian symbolism... Michael VII Ducas, AD 1071-1078. AE Follis, 25mm, 4.1g, 6; Constantinople mint. Obv.: Nimbate bust of Christ facing, wearing pallium and colobus, holding book of Gospels; star to either side. Rev.: MIXAHΛ RACIA O Δ; Bearded bust of Michael VII facing, wearing crown and loros and holding labarum and globus cruciger. Ref.: SB 1878.
  3. I received a couple of those in my lot as well. It would have been nice for us collectors if they had bothered to date them!
  4. I love the delicate script on this coin... Nero Æ 22mm of Prymnessus, Phrygia. AD 54-68. Ti. Ioulios Proklos, magistrate. NEPΩNA KAIΣAPA ΠPYMNHΣΣEIΣ, laureate head to right / ΕΠΙ • ΤΙ • ΙΟΥΛΙΟΥ ΠΡΟΚΛΟΥ, Dikaiosyne standing facing, head to left, holding scales and grain ears. RPC I 3207; Von Aulock Phrygien II 1022-31. 6.60g, 22mm, 12h.
  5. Got this little guy from a TX dealer. Couldn't resist. It's off-center and worn, but how often do you come across little Athenian bronzes?
  6. Just to prove how "good enough" yours are, here are mine. Swap?
  7. It's a tourist token. When I visited the UN headquarters in NY back in the 90's, the gift shop had a selection of these kinds of cheap tokens you could get as souvenirs. They were all made in China.
  8. This is probably the most likely explanation. The bust on that die is well-done. Why waste it? Just call him emperor in the legend and add the headgear on the next die.
  9. I'm guessing an addirional benefit to the balled-flan technique is that it would help the metal flow completely into the highest points of the devices, which are in the middle of the dies. Sicilian silver is frequently worn from circulatoon, but rarely do you find flat strikes.
  10. Good point! I can use it in my planters. Wow, this is like winning the lottery! 😃
  11. You have the 10 centimos denomination. I received a couple of 1 centimo coins. As you mentioned, the type doesn't reference Spain in the inscriptions, but another interesting feature is that it gives the weight and division of the coin: in my case one gram, one thousand pieces per kilogram; in your case, 10 grams, 100 pieces per kilogram. I wonder how many coin types meant for circulation included their weight in the legends? I don't know moderns very well, so I can't think of any... SPAIN. Provisional Government. Un Centimo, 15mm, 1.0g, 6h. Obv.: UN GRAMMO; Seated Hispanic within beaded border; LM below (engraver Luis Marchionni Hombrón). Rev.: MIL PIEZAS EN KILOG. UN CENTIMO; Rampant lion, oval arms within beaded circle; OM below (Oeschger Mesdach) Ref.: KM 660; Cal 27.
  12. In contrast to Alfonso X, here is Enrique IV - so weak and ineffectual that he earned the anti-honorific "Impotent." He did manage to recapture Gibralter from the Muslims, but his nobles fell into warring factions that accomplished little of any good for the Castilian people. At the age of 15 he was married to Blanche of Navarre, in order to strengthen relations between Navarre and Castile, but the marriage was annulled 13 years later because it was never consummated. Perhaps that's part of the reason for his moniker. However, the local prostitutes attested to the fact that Henry was not the least bit impotent, so apparently he just didn't take a shine to Blanche. There's no need to go on about his history - it's the boring history of a mediocre man that did little but pursue his own gratification. However, he did know how to dress the part of a medieval king... I got three of these billon blancas in the lot, two from the Burgos mint, one from Toledo. This is the best one... SPAIN. Kingdom of Castile and Leon. Enrique IV "the Impotent" (1454-1474). BL Blanca, 22mm, 0.9g, 12h; Burgos mint, 1471-1474. Obv.: ENRICVS DEI GRATIA REX; Castle in double-lined diamond; mintmark B below; all within dotted circle. Rev.: XPS VINCIT XPS REGNAT; Lion in double-lined square; within dotted circle. Ref.: AB 828.
  13. Hello friends, need a cheap numismatic snack? I always have a good handful of quality coins for $50 and less... Budget Ancients Click Here Budget Modern World Coins Click Here Peace and happy collecting! -John
  14. I really like these quadrantes - so many types to collect. And again, your video shows the true character of the coin. But were they actually the price of a tryst in a brothel? I've heard that said before, but I've never found any evidence for it. Were prostitutes really that cheap in ancient Rome?
  15. Post it and let's see what's up. You don't owe the auction house anything, certainly not concealing possible fraud.
  16. A few years ago a Spanish dealer sent me a bag of coins and they didn't look particularly wonderful, so they sat on the shelf until last week. I started poking through them and actually discovered some interesting pieces, so I'll post them in this thread over the next few days. Feel free to post any of your MODERN Spanish coins - we'll leave the ancients for another thread. For starters, here's a billon meaja from the Kingdom of Castile and Leon, struck by Alfonso X "the Sage", and produced only in the year 1281. Alfonso came as a pleasant surprise to me. He wasn't merely another dumb monarch playing a game of thrones. He was a scholar and musician. scientist, poet, and sponsor of many translations aimed at educating the Castilian people in a variety of subjects. A true "Renaissance Man." If you'd like to get into a medieval mood, listen to some of the music he composed at YouTube here... Anyway, here's the coin. Apparently it's pretty rare. The only other examples I found were on Numista... https://en.numista.com/catalogue/castile_and_leon-8.html SPAIN. Castile and Leon. Alfonso X, 1252-1281. BL Meaja, 12mm, 0.6g; 10h. Obv.: CA-ST-EL-LE; Castle within double-lined square, adorned with two circles at each corner. Rev.: LE-GI-ON-IS; Lion standing left within double-lined square, adorned with two circles at each corner. Ref.: AB 280-3.
  17. The problem is, if a coin has rough surfaces, it's generally rough on both the devices and fields. If you only applied smoothing to the fields, you would have a very unnatural look. You would definitely have to work on the devices as well to give the coin a unified appearance. As far as I'm concerned, smoothing is fine if and only if it removes dirt and mineral deposits. The patina itself, regardless of its condition, should be left alone. Case in point. Here's an as of Domitian, quite rough. There's no way you could just smooth the fields without also tooling the devices, or the coin would look half-baked. But as far as I'm concerned, I LIKE this kind of look in an ancient bronze. It looks rugged and, well...ancient, as it should.
  18. Some coins are beyond help. They just are what they are.
  19. That's an impressive set of lilliputian coins!
  20. DIFFICILIS QVONDAM DOMINIS PARERE SERENIS IVSSVS ET EXTINCTIS PALMAM PORTARE TYRANNIS OMNIA THEODOSIO CEDVNT SVBOLIQVE PERENNI TERDENIS SIC VICTVS EGO DOMITVSQVE DIEBVS IVDICE SVB PROCLO SVPERAS ELATVS AD AVRAS "Formerly [I was] reluctant to obey peaceful masters, and ordered to carry the palm [of victory] for tyrants now vanquished and forgotten. [But] all things yield to Theodosius and to his eternal offspring. So too was I prevailed over and tamed in three times ten days, raised towards the skies under governor Proclus." The interesting piece of information in that is that it took 30 days to get the thing from Alexandria to Constantinople. That's a long hike with more than a few tons of rock.
  21. Man, that's a difficult type to get your hands on, and that's a very nice example. Well done!
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