I don't know......it's just so dead on with it's placing. You could almost 'shelve' it in a library........
It's because all Ancients are widely different.... I love my MS-65 Morgan too though... I'm a collector of two different worlds (Gem Type and Ancients are my main focus points)
That's because we research everything so much more than US collectors, as every single piece has a major history
That's not exactly true. Dedicated US collectors do an enormous amount of research, but it tends to be more numismatic in nature than historical.
I've got a decent set of Kennedy Half Dollars and I've found that there's a great deal to learn, especially when it comes to die varieties - it's a life-long pursuit. I was born in 63, so the series almost spans my lifetime.
Hey... I did say I like my Gem Morgan is my second favorite coin I did say US collectors don't do as much research... I said that US collectors do less research per coin (in General... some beauties or errors like the 1900 IHC on Gold planchet, patterns, etc. do require more research per coin)
I'm not so sure WC - for example, there's a world of difference between the 1971 Kennedy Halves struck at the Denver and Philadephia mints. And that's just one year. Any long-run series is going to offer the serious collector an enormous learning curve. Take the old copper guys, for instance, that have been researching and collecting die varieties their entire lives and can frequently attribute a variety in a matter of seconds. The amount of research a collector spends on his coins depends not on the coins themselves, but on the dedication of the collector.
Nope... Up here, the types are almost all commemorative... It wouldn't be a very large collection for me (and not as many Eagles!) Most of our circulating types have been the same since before my Grandparents were born... not enough interest for me.. US has a lot of types that are interesting, as do Ancients
Well, all I know's is I label a coin 'proof'/'Unc', but then again, I collect mostly 'moderns'.......not much pedigree there, US Mint. Zippo.
Sardinia and Southern Italy Under Carthaginian Domination Dominion of Carthage Siculo- Punic Era Sardinia c. 264 -241 BC AE Shekel 5.56 g x 20.2 mm Obverse: Tanit Left Double Drop Ear rings Reverse: Bust of Horse right Ref: Zeugitana, Carthage c. 300-241 No Pellet Variant of SNG Copenhagen #169-171
Hey A-Dawg, how is it goin' tonight? => man, I've always loved that coin of yours ... it's a beaut :thumb:
Steve? Now it's Maxwell Smart? Traci, the Sardinian authorities have a dragnet out for you tonite........:devil: