The color purpura

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by red_spork, Mar 14, 2016.

  1. red_spork

    red_spork Triumvir monetalis

    The Latin purpura loosely translates to the English purple, but a more precise description of the specific color family described by this word is "Tyrian purple", a range of purple dyes derived from the excretions of various types of sea snails. Tyrian purple was prized throughout much of the ancient world because unlike other dyes, it did not fade in the sun and in fact, became more intense. Theopompus relates that in Colophon, the prized dye was worth its weight in silver. So what, might you ask, does this have to do with coins? Well, this particular coin bears a murex-shell above the horses on the reverse, along with "PVR", thought to be short for the cognomen Purpurio. The murex shell may simply be a pun on similarity of the cognomen Purpurio to the color purpura, however J.S. Richardson offers another explanation, in his paper "The Triumph, the Praetors and the Senate in the Early Second Century B.C." from The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 65 (1975).

    According to Richardson, this cognomen first appears in the historical record in reference to the moneyer's ancestor, L. Furius Purpurio, who as praetor in 200 B.C., defeated the last remnants of Hamilcar's invasion force as it traveled through Gaul. Furius had requested assistance from Rome, but the praetor encountered and defeated the enemy forces before the reinforcements sent from Etruria could arrive. After this he traveled to Rome and asked for a triumph, which was quickly granted, making him the first Praetor to receive a triumph, in stark contrast to the usual tradition of only granting triumphs to Consuls. Livy doesn't explicitly say this, but Richardson and others theorize that the cognomen Purpurio refers to the extraordinary achievement of this praetor taking up the "vestis triumphalis" - the Tyrian purple vest worn by individuals during their triumphs.

    At any rate, this coin is a really fantastic example of a really interesting type. It has one of the clearest murex shells of any of the examples I was able to find, along with some beautiful toning that is beginning to develop and while it does have some flat striking at about 6 o'clock on both sides, that's probably the only reason I was able to afford such an otherwise excellent example. It's also ex. RBW, a nice bonus. I totally Clio'd someone to win it(hopefully not one of my fellow CoinTalk'ers) for about 2.5x estimate but I think it was well worth it for this beautiful coin.

    Cr187.1Combined.jpg

    Roman Republic AR Denarius(18.8 mm, 3.99 g, 12 h), Furius Purpurio, moneyer, circa 169-158 B.C. Rome mint. Helmeted head of Roma right; behind, X. Border of dots / Luna in biga right, holding reins of nearer horse in left hand and reins of further horse and goad in right hand; above, murex-shell; below, PVR; in linear frame, ROMA. Line border. Crawford 187/1; Sydenham 424; BMCRR Italy 420; Babelon Furia 13.
    Ex. RBW Collection, Ex. Crédit Suisse 5, 4/18/86, lot 246
     
    Last edited: Mar 14, 2016
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  3. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Red: That is a beautiful example and a well detailed murex shell. It almost looks 3D. Let me know when you want to relocate it to my collection, eh?
     
    Pishpash likes this.
  4. Eng

    Eng Senior Eng

    Wow nice coin Red..:)
     
  5. Ancientnoob

    Ancientnoob Money Changer

    Thats a really awesome shell! I love shells here a couple of my better ones, they are Conch shells not Murex shells :-(
    HamsvatiA.jpg
    BigPyuCReshoot.jpg
    HalinPyu.jpg
     
  6. red_spork

    red_spork Triumvir monetalis

    Only if you can convince ol' Carthago to sell his even better example to me :)
     
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  7. red_spork

    red_spork Triumvir monetalis

    Ancientnoob likes this.
  8. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Sell? Who said sell. Relocate my friend. Relocate!
     
    Carthago likes this.
  9. Stevearino

    Stevearino Well-Known Member

    Red: beautiful! Lydia, of Bible fame, was a "seller of purple cloth," indicating she was dealing in pricey goods. Loved your write-up.

    Steve
     
  10. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    Great coin, red. The detail on that murex shell is completely off the charts, but really, there's much to love about this coin. Congrats!
     
  11. Carthago

    Carthago Does this look infected to you?

    Nice write up Red and congrats on the RBW Purpurio! The murex shell is perfect and I hunk you did really well on it! Nice earlier pedigree too.

    Here's mine again. I couldn't resist. One of my favorite earlier issues. :smug:

    Furius Purpurio Denarius Roma 13.jpg
     
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  12. ancientcoinguru

    ancientcoinguru Well-Known Member

    Nice write up, @red_spork, love the details on that shell! I am first in line behind @Bing (after it is relocated to him, he can relocate it to me:p)
     
    red_spork likes this.
  13. Jwt708

    Jwt708 Well-Known Member

    Nothing to share but envy!
     
  14. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    The murex shell on these denarii is indeed the most interesting part of the design, but has anyone else noticed that the coins exhibit some of the most consistently well-proportioned and regal depictions of Roma? Occasionally you come across an oversize nose, but nothing that looks like some of the caricatures you find on RR denarii of other moneyers. This one lasted in my store for about three hours, also ex-RBW...

    purpk.jpg
     
  15. red_spork

    red_spork Triumvir monetalis

    Rome during this period had very skilled celators but unfortunately there was very little silver struck so you don't see it much unless you collect the bronzes, which almost never come in high grade and hoards of them from this period are almost unheard of. But I agree, by far one of the best engravings of Roma you'll find.
     
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  16. Stevearino

    Stevearino Well-Known Member

    Dang, had to look up celator. Going to bed having learned at least one thing today.

    Steve
     
    red_spork likes this.
  17. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Wow, r_spork => congrats on a great OP-score ... total winner

    murex-shell => winna-winna (I'm totally jealous of that symbol)
     
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  18. Prokles

    Prokles Well-Known Member

    Great coin! The murex shell is fantastic (it so richly depicted)! Congrats
     
  19. Volodya

    Volodya Junior Member

    My example:

    [​IMG]
     
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  20. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    Don't learn too much. In its day, there were those of the opinion that it was an inappropriate term for die cutter. The Latin word celator means secret keeper.
     
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