sweet, sweet new addition, my friend (never say die!!) ... I love seeing ya buying coins!! (you rock, big bro) Ummmm, oh I also have a couple of those example types ... Galerius Silvered Follis 305-306 AD Galerius & Genius Oh, and my sweet-sweet show-pony ... Constantius I AE Follis Date: 301-303 AD Diameter: 28.5 mm Weight: 10.1 grams Obverse: CONSTANTIVS NOB C - Laureate and cuirassed bust left, holding sceptre over left shoulder Reverse: GENIO POPVLI ROMANI - Genius standing left, holding patera over altar and cornucopiæ; B right, PLC in ex. (Lugdunum mint) Reference: RIC 167a Other: Superb and bold portrait .... yummy, yummy ...
I'm about as West Virginian as they get, but the army made me wear shoes. It took 33 years to get used to them darn things!
Diocletian AE Follis. London mint, ca 298-300 AD. 10g, 28.18mm OBV: IMP C DIOCLETIANVS P F AVG, laureate & cuirassed bust right. REV: GENIO POPV-LI ROMANI, Genius standing left, holding patera in extended right hand & cradling cornucopiae in left arm. No mintmark. REF: RIC VI London 6A. This is my only Diocletian and a London mint at that. Would you believe, this coin was a gift.
I have bought far too many coins of Diocletian over the years. This one always struck me as having some eye appeal. Diocletian Follis Obv:– D N DIOCLETIANO FELICISSIMO SEN AVG, laureate bust right in imperial mantle, olive branch in right hand, mappa in left Rev:– PROVIDENTIA DEORVM QVIES AVGG, Providentia standing right, extending right hand to Quies standing left, branch upward in right hand, vertical sceptre in left Minted in Cyzicus (not Trier) ( S | F / KS //PTR) Reference:– RIC VI Trier 677a (R) (see notes) Notes:- This is perhaps one of the most unusual issues in the entire follis series. It is nearly always attributed to Trier (Treveri), but a comparison of portrait styles and an examination of follis hoards reveals that this issue was not struck in Trier but in Cyzicus. Two officinae struck this issue, and the KS in the field between the two figures is actually the mintmark, not the PTR. A look at the coins of Cyzicus (RIC 22-23) shows that the same two officinae struck this issue without the PTR also. The Senior Augustus issues of Diocletian and Maximianus were struck at every mint currently in operation. Apparently, the first coins of this type were prepared at Trier and examples were sent to the various mints for the individual mints to copy. At Cyzicus, the die engravers copied everything, including the Trier mintmark and put their own mintmark in the field. Eventually someone soon realized the mistake and new dies were prepared with the mintmark in its proper location.
Excellent coins everyone. I have a Diocletion but is not a genio. Doug H. Wow can't seem to be able to lod a pic today. Will try tomorrow.
We can't really go with a selection of Tatrarchy coins without Severus II. Severus II - Follis Obv:– FL VAL SEVERVS NOB CAES, laureate head right Rev:– GENIO AVGG ET CAESARVM N N, Genius standing left holding patera & cornucopia Minted in Cyzicus (//KA). A.D. 305-306 Reference:– RIC VI Cyzicus 20a