I might not have the right Moesia here...inferior, superior, exterior, posterior or one of the other suburbs....that Gordian III is nasty but ya got a play the ones ya got!
Phew, I'm glad I didn't have to go out and buy one afterall. SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS AE (3.21g, 21.2mm) MOESIA INFERIOR Marcianopolis, 193 - 211 AD. H&J, Marcianopolis 6.14.14.1; Varbanov 732; Moushmov 397. O: AV K L CE CEVHPOC, laureate bust right. R: MARKIANOPOLITWN, Hercules strangling the Nemean lion.
i missed this thread somehow, i have a few to contribute.... a caracalla and julia domna pentassaria a porr little elagabalus with tripod snake reverse and a poorer little diadumenian assarian with a lion reveres.
I have another Moesia offering ... Plautilla, AE-26. Moesia Augusta AD 202 – 205 13.33g. 26mm. Obverse: Plautilla, the wife of Caracalla (Her draped bust right) Reverse: Eagle standing front on globe, head right, wreath in beak
Septimius Severus and Julia Domna: 28-27 mm. "Sept" in Greek 10:00 - 11:00. "Severus" in Greek 11:30 - 1:30, "Julia" 2:30 - 4:00. "Domna" below the busts Tyche (Fortuna) standing left with rudder and cornucopiae Magistrate: Flavius Ulpianus SNG Copenhagen II, plate 4.214. Sear Greek Imperial 2285 obverse/different reverse. "0f Marcianopolis" in Greek 11:30 - 6:00.
I'll resurrect this thread to post a coin that arrived today. Not happy with the pic, but I'll save reshooting it for another day...
Vis-a-vis portraits have the problem that what looks good on him usually does not look good on her. Then there is the question as to whether you should match the lighting of the obverse to that of the reverse. Valentinian's image does this last but Julia looks better than Septimius. Your two faces match but the reverse doesn't. Getting the both of these at the same time is a task at which I usually fail.
Philip II and his queen, Otacilia Severa, reverse is Serapis standing. I haven't looked up any reference numbers yet.
A HUGE, perhaps unique, medallion purchased about a year ago... Marcianopolis, Moesia Inferior, Septimius Severus, 193-211 AD. AE 42 mm medallion, 52.54 gm, 2h. Aurelius Gallus, magistrate. OBV: ΑV K Λ CEΠ CЄVΗΡΟC Π, laureate, draped, and cuirassed bust of Septimius Severus right / REV: V AV ΓAΛΛΟ • MA-PKIAN, Hephaestus seated to right on cippus, applying hammer to a crested Corinthian helmet set on low column; faced by Athena, standing left and holding spear and shield; in exergue, OΠOΛΙΤΩΝ. Varbanov ---; AMNG ---; BMC ---. Unrecorded in the principal references.
Magnificent! If it were commonly available, half the size and twice as worn, I'd feel I really needed one of these. As it is, it is beyond a dream. Thank you for sharing.
Holy smokes => the new guy has skills-to-burn!! *welcome, ancientnut* Man, I'm dying to see your next addition .... please keep 'em coming!!
Thanks for the comments! I purchased the medallion in a Heritage auction last January. I've since decided to limit myself to Greek silver tetradrachms/staters and have consigned it, together with 22 other coins, to CNG. I bet I won't get my cost back, but that's the price you pay for impulse purchases!