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Ryro

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This coin was made by the more-or-less sovereign Chinese gold mining communities (gongsi) of west Borneo in present-day Indonesia during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The obverse inscription is a unique and meaningful invention for community but the reverse inscription is blundered and unreadable, copied crudely from contemporary Qing Dynasty coins which bore Manchu script mintmarks.

This coin is not really an imitation coin, but it in certainly imitative!

image.png.bd60ca7aefe158d12faaebeb9c0e4616.png

 

Next: same theme

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16558543228648799974393910686804.jpg.53633a611d76eb6428de76a7ce38ad34.jpg

Arcadius, contemporary imitation. DNARCA-DIVSAVG (or similar). Note the usual "PF" is missing. The reverse prototype is SALVS REI-PVBLICAE, perhaps Nicomedia with staurogram in left field and [S]MN[A/B/Γ] in exergue.

Next...Arcadius.

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[IMG]
ROME
Arcadius, AD 395-408
AR Siliqua, 16mm, 1.1g, 12h.
Obv.: DN ARCADI-VS PF AVG; Pearl diademed, draped, and cuirassed bust right.
Rev.: VIRTVS RO-MANORVM; Roma seated left on cuirass, holding Victory on globe and reversed spear

Next: MAMERTINI / MAMERTINOI / MAMERTINES

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To keep it going.

[IMG]
The Mamertini, Sicily, c. 288 - 278 B.C.
Mamertini or "children of Mars," was the name taken by a band of Campanian (or Samnite) freebooters who about 289 B.C. seized the Greek colony of Messana at the north-east corner of Sicily, after having been hired by Agathocles to defend it (Polyb. 1. 7. 2).
Bronze pentonkion,
Calciati I p. 93, 3/1; SNG ANS 402; BMC Sicily p. 109, 3; SNG Cop 434 var (on reverse Φ left), gF, some corrosion and pitting,
Messana mint, weight 16.288g, maximum diameter27.5mm, die axis 270o, c. 288 - 278 B.C.;
obverse APEΣ, laureate head of Ares right, Macedonian helmet behind;
reverse MAMEPTINΩN, eagle standing left on a thunderbolt, head left, wings open

NEXT: UNhelmeted Ares / Mars

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6 hours ago, Alegandron said:

NEXT: UNhelmeted Ares / Mars

Well, six hours have passed and still no Un-helmeted Ares/Mars....Patience has never been my strongest attribute, so I will see if I can advance the board with this coin of Un-helmeted Hermes.  While I recognize that Hermes and Ares are different gods, they are both gods, and, well, ahem, there is not much more to say than that.  I think the rest of my thought here is obvious: this is just a fun coin - and although it is only sort-of, not really, OK not at all, matching the request from @Alegandron, I suspect he will pardon the transgression.  I'll add one more justification - if it weren't for Hermes - Ares might have been imprisoned forever in a brazen jar (and that doesn't sound like fun) - he might have even perished.

"So suffered Ares, when Otus and mighty Ephialtes, the sons of Aloeus, bound him in cruel bonds, and in a brazen jar he lay bound for thirteen months; and then would Ares, insatiate of war, have perished, had not the stepmother of the sons of Aloeus, the beauteous Eëriboea, brought tidings unto Hermes; and he stole forth Ares, that was now sore distressed, for his grievous bonds were overpowering him."

- Homer, Iliad, 5.385

1001359943_CAracallaProvincial.jpg.048a954d7e93b1e40e76f1bf3e275668.jpg

Pisidia, Termessos Major Æ 26mm. Pseudo-autonomous issue, time of the Severans, third century AD. ΤЄΡΜΗϹϹЄΩΝ, bare-headed and draped bust of Hermes to right, kerykeion over shoulder / ΤΩΝ ΜЄΙΖΟΝΩΝ, Apollo standing facing, head to left, holding branch and folds of drapery.

Next: Another God or Goddess Without Helmet

Edited by Sulla80
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IMG_4889.jpg.e8c5b61bd88d2b4d133ae1d745729afe.jpg

Jarir 786-788 Tabaristan

Abbasid Governors. AR hemidrachm (24.1 mm, 1.89 g, 9 h). Dated PYE 135/A.D. 786. Crowned Sasanian-style bust right / Fire altar flanked by attendants; star and

crescent flanking flames. Alb.64; VF or better, almost as struck, with luster. Former FRC

next: severed head

 

 

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2 hours ago, Ryro said:

Next: severed head

The head on this coin looks relatively unattached:

image.png.55b437ffd56653e6e8631581771617d5.png

Kings of Paphlagonia, Pylaimenes II/III Euergetes (Circa 133-103 BC), AE 3.85g, 17.4mm

Obv: Facing head of a bull

Rev: ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ - ΠYΛΑΙΜΕΝΟΥ / ΕΥΕΡΓΕΤΟΥ, winged kerykeion

Ref: SNG BM 1555

Notes: Pylaimenes II or III? pieces of the story: Mithridates VI, Bithynia, an invasion, a usurper, and more in my notes.

 

Next: Bull (or part of bull)

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1189228728_AntoninusPiusNicaeaApisbull.jpg.fd1272d0ed6dbb6acfb2b3f2e19bf393.jpgAntoninus Pius, AD 138-161.
Roman provincial Æ 18.5 mm, 4.59 g, 12 h.
Bithynia, Nicaea, AD 138-161.
Obv: ΑVΤ ΚΑΙϹΑΡ ΑΝΤΩΝ[EΙΝΟϹ?], bare-head, right.
Rev: ΝΕΙΚΑΙΕΩΝ, Apis-bull standing, right, head surmounted by solar disk and wearing uraeus crown.
Refs: RPC IV.1, 10001 (temporary); Mionnet 5.89,455; RG I(3).413,118(2) pl. LXIX, 19.

Next: Antoninus Pius.

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1989373023_983803155_antpi.jpg.8e1723ea8d8323882cf60c549dfd8596(1).jpg.df78596ecbaca9f5f5f86e3c57f1d9d7.jpg

Antoninus Pius- Apamia

138-161 AD
27mm, 5.09g,
PHRYGIA, Apameia
SNG von Aulock 3495; RPC Online temp 1736
OBV: AV KAI AΔPI ANTΩNЄINOC, laureate bust right.
REV: [AΠA]-MЄ[ΩN], Tyche wearing polos standing left holding cornucopiae and rudder.

Next- A broad flan, low weight coin.

 

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2 hours ago, Curtisimo said:

Next: A Roman Republican coin struck outside of Rome.

Is imperatorial OK ?

79d18ffd6476492c815febe7358fab0b.jpg

Marcus Antonius and Lucius Antonius, Denarius - Ephesus mint 41 BC
M ANT IMP AVG III VIR RPCM NERVA PROQ P, Bare head of Marcus Antonius right
L ANTONIUS COS, Bare head of Lucius Antonius right
3.58 gr
Ref : HCRI # 246, RCV #1509, Cohen #2

 

Next : a portrait on each side or follow up with Marcus Antonius

Q

Edited by Qcumbor
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2 hours ago, Prieure de Sion said:

Next: wish me a another coin with an relationship to Legions.

here's an odd one - a counterfeiter's fourree core?

1276395151_AntonyLegioAntiquae.jpg.dad58e7bcc9412b63ef1d72469d63a67.jpg

Contemporary imitation of an Mark Antony denarius: 32-31 BC? AE-Denarius (bronze, 2.00g, 16x14mm). Legionary issue, mint moving with Antony, Legion XII?

Obv: ANT, war galley under oar right with triple ram prow and scepter tied with fillet

Rev: [XII] ANTIQ[VAE], legionary eagle (aquila) between two standards (signa)


Next: another contemporary counterfeit

Edited by Sulla80
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SA042_India_800.jpg.d84e7b2cc2ba2804f7ed8882d56b237e.jpg

Western Kshatrapas
Vijayasena as mahakshatrapa, silver drachm
240-250 CE
Obv.: Head of king right, date behind head: out of flan
Rev.: Chaitya (3-arched hill), river below, crescent moon and sun above, Brahmi legend around “rajno mahakshatrapasa damasenasaputrasa rajno mahakshatrapasa vijayasenasa”

 

Next: mountain

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Severus Nicopolis ad Istrum Hemus 2.jpg
 

Septimius Severus, AD 193-211.
Roman provincial Æ 25.0 mm, 11.27 g, 7 h.
Moesia Inferior, Nicopolis ad Istrum, Lucius Aurelius Gallus, legatus consularis, AD 201-204.
Obv: ΑVΤ CΕΠΤ• CΕVΗΡ ΠΕΡ, laureate head, right.
Rev: VΠ ΑVΡ ΓΑΛΛΟV ΝΙΚΟΠΟΛΕΙΤΩΝ / ΠΡΟC ΙCΤΡ, AIMOC across left field, mountain-god Haemus reclining right on wooded rock outcropping, resting right arm above head and cradling scepter in left arm; below, bear right, chasing leaping stag.
Refs: AMNG I 1315; Varbanov (2nd ed.) 2721; HrHJ 8.14.43.3; Moushmov 1023.

Next: personification of a geographical feature.

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normal_G_411.jpg.f645097b464559d216471bd1e4947760.jpg

Phrygia Hierapolis
2th. century
Obv: ΙƐΡΑΠΟΛƐΙΤΩΝ, draped bust of Artemis, l.; having quiver at shoulder; to l., bow
Rev: ΧΡVϹΟΡΟΑϹ, river-god Chrysoroas reclining, l., holding poppy and two ears of corn, resting on water-urn
AE, 11.17g 25mm
Ref.: L. Weber, NC 1913, 19, VIII, no. 5, RPC IV.2, 11860 (temporary).

 

Next: a real river, not a personification

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  • Benefactor

"a real river, not a personification"

 

Ummm, does this baby count?

Trajan ... Tyche with river god (swimming in the river)

Trajan & Tyche.jpg

 

NEXT => another real-river (if this coin doesn't make the cut) ... "otherwise" post a cool rabbit/hare coin

Edited by Steve
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