Jump to content

Post it and pick it!


Ryro

Recommended Posts

I'm assuming you don't mean they actually ruled...

Otacilia Severa (6th emission of Philip I) Antoninianus, 247

image.png.688c83eaa6dd988cf87912c852d33b41.png

Rome, 4th officina. Silver, 22mm, 3.55g. Draped bust right, wearing stephane and set on crescent. Concordia seated left, holding patera and double cornucopia (RIC IV, Philip I, 125c). From the Dorchester (Dorset) Hoard 1936.

Next: 4th officina

Edited by John Conduitt
  • Like 12
  • Yes 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Benefactor

"4th officina"

 

=> Here ya go ... man, I had a beauty!

 

Galeria Valeria. Augusta, Æ Follis

Cyzicus mint, 4th officina

Struck circa AD 308

293(?)-311 AD

Diameter: 26 mm

Weight: 6.34 grams

Obverse: Diademed and draped bust right

Reverse: Venus standing facing, head left, lifting dress and holding apple; MKΔ

Reference: RIC VI 38

Other:  1h … dark brown to black patina ... a fricken beauty!!

Ex-stevex6

 

Galeria Valeria.jpg

 

... ummm, I think the "delta" tells ya the officiana is 4, eh? (but I'm no coin-whiz)

 

NEXT => RAMS ... lotsa RAMS

 

 

Edited by Steve
  • Like 15
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rams? One ram, anyway. Yes it is a ram 😁

Tasciovanus Unit, 20-10BCimage.png.188b684c2215d4dbfa50a81fef4912e6.png

Verlamion. Bronze, 16mm, 1.85g. Conjoined bearded heads right, elaborate hair arranged in two rows of crescents; VER(I) in front. Ram left, pellets and rosettes in front and below, rosette flanked by two pellets above; TA(SC) above (Spink 242).

Next: Jugate

Edited by John Conduitt
  • Like 11
Link to comment
Share on other sites

image.png.6ffc40269afaaf68dbe04083c490e3de.png

Sicily, Katane
Circa 216 to 206 BC
Issued anonymously
AE Chalkous | 4.42 grams | 18mm wide
Obv: Jugate busts of Serapis and Isis
Rev: KATANAION, Apollo standing left with column to the right, holding a branch and bow

Next: another Sicily coin

  • Like 10
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Aes Formatum -  one of those so called cakes. I wish I could say it is attractive, and "better in hand" ,-  but it is not. It looks like a big piece of rusty dirt "in hand".

next,  a more attractive Aes Grave -  any denomination..

 

Xde8Lf9H3RyDx69Q2oFzE7tKqL5mn4.jpg.4d7412adaff1c186a07e3e79eab4b36d.jpg

  • Like 8
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Aes_Grave-removebg-preview.png.f772f7d0f997b1482ebec5cfeec86f3d.png

ROMAN REPUBLIC.

Anonymous. Circa 215-212 BC.

Æ Aes Grave As, 41mm, 70.7g, 12h; Post-semilibral series, Rome mint.

Obv.: Bearded head of Janus on raised disk.

Rev.: Prow left; I above.

Ref.: Crawford 41/5a; Sydenham 101.

Ex- John Anthony JAZ Auction 199 lot #1, E- Eberhard Link Collection. Ex-Münz Zentrum 88, Cologne 1997, lot 353. Peus Nachfl. 322, Frankfurt am Main 1988, lot 42. Kurpfälzische Münzhandlung 19, Mannheim 1980, lot 99. Ex-Giessener Münzhandlung 15, Munich 1979, lot 105

Next: Janiform

  • Like 11
  • Heart Eyes 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

How about a MALE and FEMALE Januform?

upload_2019-5-31_9-15-4.png 
Islands of Troas, Tenedos, 
late 5th-early 4th century BCE. 
AR Obol (8mm, 0.60g, 3h). 
Janiform head, female on l., male on r. R/ 
Labrys within incuse square. 
SNG Ashmolean 1235; HGC 6, 387.

Next: Labrys, not a Bipennis

  • Like 11
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Benefactor

"Labrys, not a Bipennis"

 

... drat, I wanted to post my bipenis, but I decided to post this instead ... 

=> back-atcha!!

 

ISLANDS off TROAS, Tenedos. AR Obol

Late 5th-early 4th century BC

Diameter: 8 mm

Weight: 0.55 grams

Obverse: Janiform head of a diademed female left and laureate male right

Reverse: Labrys in linear border within shallow incuse square

Reference: SNG Ashmolean 1235; HGC 6, 387

Other: 6h … sweetly toned

Ex-stevex6

 

Islands off Troas Tenedos Janus and Axe.jpg

 

NEXT => Hercules performing one of his cool feats (ummm, one of the 12 labours)

Edited by Steve
  • Like 10
Link to comment
Share on other sites

664.jpg.c11c778e2b760de3a647701333e1e590.jpg

MAXIMIANUS (first reign: 286-305)
Antoninianus, Lyon, 287-289
IMP C MAXIMIANVS P AVG, Radiate, helmeted, and cuirassed bust right.
VIRTVTI AVGG,  Victory standing right on club, crowning Hercules standing right, wrestling Nemean Lion.

 

Next: Another of the 12

Edited by Alwin
  • Like 12
  • Heart Eyes 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here is Hercules resting while holding the apples of the Hesperides behind his back.

BEBF0625-C4F1-4A9F-80C8-8C974854151A.jpeg.9c9ec22e32c785d4eef4c71ab6ca1280.jpeg

Roman Empire
Maximinus Daia (AD 308 - 313)
AE Follis, Antioch mint, struck ca. AD 313
Dia.: 20.5 mm
Wt.: 3.9 g
Obv.: IMP C GAL VAL MAXIMINVS P F AVG; Laureate bust right
Rev.: HERCVLI VICTORI; Hercules standing right, leaning on lions skin and club
Ref.: RIC VI 170b, Scarce
Ex FSR, lot 370 (Jul. 2018)
 

Next: another Hercules labor coin

  • Like 9
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours

 

image.png.2c70fc4eab9cb473fe95332f73dccbe0.png

Northern Song Dynasty of China
1094-1097 AD
Issued under Emperor Zhenzong
AE cash | 4.29 grams | 24.5mm wide
Obv: Shao Sheng Yuan Bao in running script (clockwise)
Rev: Blank with wide rims
Ref: Hartill #16.307, Gorny's NS#29b.23

Next: Another coin from east of Persia

Edited by TuckHard
  • Like 9
Link to comment
Share on other sites

image.png.2d2de0a3e0f6585804202a387e678cc9.png

Ming Dynasty of China
1628 to 1644 AD
Issued under Emperor Chongzhen at the Guizhou Mint
AE cash | 2.65 grams | 24.5mm wide
Obv: Chong Zhen Tong Bao (top-bottom-right-left)
Rev: Gui (for Guizhou)
Ref: Hartill #20.296, see it on Zeno.ru, Z#295561

Next: Another coin bearing only script

  • Like 7
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, TuckHard said:

Next: Another coin bearing only script

1394028768_AlKamilAyyubid1220.jpg.2f16c26779d78d6f513c558296e5c593.jpg

Islamic, Ayyubids, Egypt, al-Kamil I Muhammad, AH 615-635 / AD 1218-1238, Dirham (Silver, 22 mm, 3.00 g, 10 h), citing the caliph al-Kamil I Muhammad, Dimashq, AH 618 = AD 1221/2. Balog, Ayyubids, 430.

Al-Kamil is known as a just and compassionate ruler who sought peace with the crusaders, and peaceful co-existence for Christians and Muslims. He is also said to have met for peaceful dialog with St. Francis of Assisi during the 5th crusade ~1219 AD. He negotiated a peace treaty in 1229 with Frederick II King of Sicily, ceding Jerusalem while retaining other rights and holy sites.  More on this and related coins here: Dirhams, Sultans, Crusaders, and the Pope.

 

Next: a coin with an interesting story

Edited by Sulla80
  • Like 10
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Sulla80 said:

Next: a coin with an interesting story

Interesting is always a matter of opinion. In any case, I find the background interesting. Others perhaps not.

Caracalla's relationship with religion was, as Cassius Dio reports, determined above all by his need to obtain healing from the gods for his illnesses - he fell seriously ill several times during his lifetime. To this end, he is said to have offered sacrifices and consecrations to all the more important deities and to have prayed fervently. The gods from whom he hoped for help included the Greek healing god Asclepius, the Egyptian Serapis and Apollo, who was identified with the Celtic healing god Grannus and worshipped as Apollo Grannus. 

The emperor probably visited the temple of Apollo Grannus in Faimingen, which was then called Phoebiana and belonged to the province of Raetia. It is certain that Caracalla visited the city of Pergamon, where he hoped for healing in the temple of Aesculapius. In 214 AD, after his exhausting campaign in Germania, the emperor had himself cured in the sanctuary of Asclepius there, renovated the temple of the god in gratitude for his healing and had coins with his image issued in Rome.

It was also Pergamon that granted Caracalla the right to consecrate a third neo-Christian temple, in which the Greek inhabitants of the province of Asia could worship Asclepius and Caracalla. Caracalla became a "fellow god" (syntheos) of Asclepius. No new temple was built for this purpose, but the statue of Caracalla was added to the most important cult image of Asclepius in Pergamon.

The cruel fratricide burdened Caracalla all his life. He had terrible nightmares and probably suffered from psychosomatic complaints. But Rome could not afford a sick emperor at the beginning of the crisis-ridden 3rd century. So the emperor sought healing by visiting the shrines of the healing gods. Although the treatment of wounds and everyday physical ailments was well developed in Roman times, there were still countless illnesses for which doctors could not prescribe an effective cure for their patients. These sick people took refuge in the sacred groves and temples of Aesculapius, Apollo or Amphiareios. 

There the priests proclaimed to them that illness could result from the fact that man had not lived in accordance with divine law, that the gods had sent suffering to tell them this. It was now a matter of restoring harmony with the gods and the world as a human being. In healing sleep, the sick entered into contact with the supernatural and in dreams were shown ways and means of relief. 

Caracalla must have had a liberating dream in Pergamon. It is not known how the priests there helped him to make his peace with the gods and his salvation. In any case, the emperor remained grateful to the god Asclepius throughout his life. Apart from the large donations to the temple priests and the privileges for Pergamon and its sanctuary, as mentioned before, he honoured the god by making him known throughout the empire in a large and extensive coin issue - and in exactly the same way and representation as he was worshipped in Pergamon.

In fact, Asclepius from Pergamon is clearly recognisable on the coinage, as this god was only depicted there with a so-called omphalos (an egg-shaped stone), as he is also depicted on this type of denarius on the right in the reverse image. It is interesting to note that this representation was apparently derived from the local coinage of Pergamon, whereas it was normally the city of Rome that provided the models for the coin motifs of the areas dependent on it.

There is a contemporary sestertius coinage from 215 AD (RIC IV Caracalla 538a), which even more clearly underpins the reference to the cult of Asclepius from Pergamon on the reverse. Here, in addition to Omphalos, his son Telesphoros is also depicted - which was probably no longer possible on the denarius for reasons of space. 

 

m0046_rom_silber_denar_marcus_aurelius_severus_antoninus_caracalla.png

  • Like 11
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1071978235_normal_caracalla_eastern_mint(1).jpg.216ee9cf46f91202b22c745b255abd7c.jpg

Caracalla. 198-217 AD. AR Denarius (2.82 gm, 19mm). Laodicea mint. Struck 200/1 AD.
Obv.: ANTONINVS AVGVSTVS, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right.
Rev.: SAL GEN HVM, Salus standing left, holding serpent-entwined scepter, and raising kneeling figure personifying the human race. RIC #350; BMC 701; RSC 558a. gVF.

Next....Laodicea mint Denarius of anyone male or female.

  • Like 10
Link to comment
Share on other sites

normal_Septimius_Severus_02.jpg.24fbbdcfc16a229d4755f11856b67614.jpg

Septimius Severus (AD 193-211)
AR Denarius, Laodicea ad Mare Mint
Obv.: L - SEPT SEV AVG IMP XI PART MAX, Laureate head of Severus right
Rev.: COS II PP, Victory advancing left holding wreath and palm
Ag, 3.40g, 18.7mm
Ref.: RIC 503a; RSC 96.

 

Another denarius from a mint outside rome

Edited by shanxi
  • Like 10
Link to comment
Share on other sites

normal_severus_antioch.jpg.c7043cd5d468c8d213a2b29eaf1396f0.jpg

Severus Alexander. 222-235 AD. AR Denarius (3.12 gm, 20mm). Antioch mint. Struck 222 AD.
Obv.: IMP C M AVR SEV ALEXAND AVG, laureate and draped bust right.
Rev.: P M TR P COS P P, Fortuna standing left holding rudder on globe and cornucopiae; star in left field.
RIC #267. gVF.

Next...An Empress Denarius minted outside of Rome.

  • Like 10
Link to comment
Share on other sites

normal_Claudius_Gothicus_2.jpg.94bbe06fcc891ea66e096eb7984af519.jpg

Claudius Gothicus
Egypt, Alexandria
Billon-Tetradrachme, AD 269/270
Obv.: AVT KΛAV∆IOC CEB, laureate and cuirassed bust right
Rev.: bust of Alexandria right wearing turreted cap, earring, and chiton L - B (year 2) flanking across field
AE, , 9.66g, maximum diameter 20.7mm, die axis 0deg
Ref.: Milne 4246, Geissen 3030, Dattari 5383, SNG Cop 849, BMC 2330, Kampmann-Ganschow 104.19, Emmett 3869 (R2)

 

Next: Alexandria (the personification, not the city)

  • Like 11
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, shanxi said:

Next: Alexandria (the personification, not the city)

311346295_NeroTetelephant.jpg.65855f16653e9f8064b2f20c70b7874f.jpg

Nero, BI Tetradrachm of Alexandria, Egypt, dated RY 12 = AD 65/6

Obv: ΝΕΡΩ ΚΛΑV Κ[ΑΙΣ ΣΕΒ ΓΕΡ], radiate bust to right, wearing aegis 

Rev: ΑΥΤΟΚΡΑ, bust of Alexandria, wearing elephant headdress, to right; LIB (date) in right field

Ref: RPC I 5289; Dattari (Savio) 204; Emmett 109


Next: Alexandria personified OR a coin from Alexandria

  • Like 12
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...