Share your rarest coin

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by ancientone, Apr 28, 2016.

  1. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    This is not really a rare coin but a victim of circumstances. It was believed to belong in the period of RIC VIII (Julian II) when RIC VI was written but by the time that RIC VIII came out, the type was realized to be from c.313 rather than the time of Julian II so it was not listed in VIII either. It was listed in Vagi (page 516) who priced it at $15 to $100 (F to EF). At one time I was trying to get the whole set of officiae but I still am missing one and have not been putting effort into that lately. They tend to sell too high because dealers (of deceit or ignorance?) pump them up as more rare than they are. The rare one below is third down, officina B with reverse mispelling SANSTO. rx3770bb2385.jpg rx3780bb2386.jpg rx3790bb2200.jpg rx3800bb2387.jpg rx3810bb2388.jpg rx3815bb2592.jpg rx3825bb2866.jpg rx3831bb0000.jpg rx3840bb2398.jpg
    rx3850b02202lg.JPG
    I need an I (officina ten).
     
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  3. Ken Dorney

    Ken Dorney Yea, I'm Cool That Way...

    True, not rare but they are scarce. Once upon a time they sold for just a few dollars as they were quite misunderstood, and, well, just unpopular. This is not so these days, and I see decent ones selling around $50 on average, though can be had much cheaper.
     
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  4. ancientone

    ancientone Well-Known Member

    Great coins all! I guess I look for rare coins more than most and the condition is not as critical if it fits my collection.

    zacynthus.jpg
    Achaea. Zacynthus, Island off Elis. Marcus Aurelius AE20. Pan with infant Dionysus
    Zacynthus; Achaea; Peleponnessus (District: Zacynthus). Date 161–180. Obverse design laureate head of Marcus Aurelius, r. Obverse inscription ΑΥ ΚΑΙ Μ ΑΥ ΑΝΤΩΝΕΙΝ ΑΥ
    Reverse design Pan standing, r., nebris over shoulders, holding bunch of grapes and infant Dionysus
    Reverse inscription ΖΑΚΥΝΘΙΩΝ
    BMC 93-4

    iconiumNero.jpg
    Lycaonia, Iconium. Nero Æ20. Head of Perseus
    Nero Æ20 of Iconium, Lycaonia. 54-68.
    Obv: NEPWN KAICAP CEBACTOC Laureate head r.
    Rev: KLAYDEIKONIEWN Head of Perseus r., harpa over shoulder.
    RPC 3545. 4.3g, 20mm

    athena2.jpg

    Paphlagonia, Sinope. Hadrian AE17. Athena
    Obv: IMP C TRAI HADRIANVS / Laureate bust of Hadrian r.
    Rev: C IF ANN CLXVIII (year 168) / Athena standing head l., spear and facing circular shield lowered at her sides.
    17mm and 3.86g.
    WADD RG S207A,107(1) / COLL PARIS(1)

    Thanks to Mark Fox for Identification.

    Sidon~0.jpg
    Phoenicia, Sidon. Severus Alexander Æ26.
    Obv: Laureate and cuirassed bust right, seen from behind.
    Rev: Three standards.
    26mm., 8.3g.
    BMC -; SNG Copenhagen -; AUB -.

    PednelissusHadrian.jpg Pisidia, Pednelissos. Hadrian AE13, 2.62g.
    Obv: ADRIANOS / laureate bust of Hadrian r.
    Rev: PEDNH / Apollo nude, standing beside column, holding bow in r.
    von Aulock, Pisidiens I, 1187
     
  5. Prokles

    Prokles Well-Known Member

    I'm collecting coins of Peloponnesos... Needless to say that there are a lot of rarities.

    My very last acquisition:
    28-04-2016 18-03-45.jpg

    Heraia, Peloponnesos. AR Obol (11 mm, 0.70 g), c. late 4th - early 3rd century BC.
    Obv. Head of Athena left, wearing Corinthian helmet.
    Rev. Straight-sided H over bow right.
    BCD Peloponnesos 1368 (this coin). Traité III, 1016, pl. CCXXVIII, 1

    In BCD Peloponnesos, A. Walker qualified it as 'extremely rare'.
     
  6. ancientone

    ancientone Well-Known Member

    Wow Prokles! That is nice. Are you buying Roman also? <edit>
     
    Last edited: Apr 28, 2016
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  7. ancientone

    ancientone Well-Known Member

    Nice collection Doug! Officina I and you have a completed theme!:cool:
     
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  8. ancientnut

    ancientnut Well-Known Member

    My three rarest coins:

    [​IMG]
    1. Thermai Himerensis, Sicily tetradrachm, 370-350 BC
    Jenkins in his work on Punic coins (1972) knew of only four examples, all from the same dies.
    In a diligent search of internet resources, I found only one other specimen and it is from the same dies, too.

    [​IMG]
    2. Katane, Sicily tetradrachm, c 461-450 BC
    CNG says "fewer than 20 specimens known...of which this is among the finest."

    [​IMG]
    3. Loas, Lucania stater, c 490-470 BC
    A very rare coin with perhaps 25 specimens known in all conditions.
     
  9. ancientone

    ancientone Well-Known Member

    Those are some incredible coins, ancientnut! Two man-faced bulls on one coin!
     
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  10. ancientnut

    ancientnut Well-Known Member

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  11. 4to2centBC

    4to2centBC Well-Known Member

    I really like this coin. A fine example.
     
  12. Brian Bucklan

    Brian Bucklan Well-Known Member

    A provincial of Trajan issued in Cilicia Diocaesarea with a Triskeles reverse:

    Trajan Triskeles.jpg

    Sometimes the most simplistic designs attract me the most.
     
  13. GregH

    GregH Well-Known Member

    My rarest coins (all of which I've posted before) are my Uranius Antoninus large bronze provincial (featuring the Emesa stone), and Libius Severus "Ricimer" monogram:

    image.jpeg image.jpeg
     
  14. Prokles

    Prokles Well-Known Member

    Thanks! I am mainly buying greek coins but, from time to time, I happen to buy a Roman (Republic).
     
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  15. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    I agree! Anepigraphic coins always appeal to me, and coins with tons of legends (especially with multiple rows of vertical letters such as on many Seleukids) seem too "busy".
     
  16. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    I am like @TIF, because of my collecting niches, I probably have a dozen or more Rare items. However, I have several that are "called" Rare such as some early Roman Republic Quinarii, etc. that I am curious if they really are. A few coins that I would share that I feel are "Rare":

    upload_2016-4-28_20-9-19.png
    Marsic Confederation
    AR Denarius.
    Corfinium mint (Capital of the Marsic Confederation), 89 BC.
    3.60g, 20mm, 8h
    Obv: Laureate head of Italia right, wearing pearl necklace; ITALIA behind, X (mark of value) below chin
    Rev: Italia, seated left on shields, holding sceptre in right hand and sword in left, being crowned with wreath by Victory who stands behind; retrograde B(?) in exergue.
    Ref: Campana 105 (same obverse die); HN Italy 412a
    Comments: Cleaning marks to rev.
    Very Rare.

    upload_2016-4-28_20-10-41.png
    India - Shakya Janapada
    AR 5-Shana
    6th-5th Century BCE
    25mm x 21mm, 7.05g
    Obv: Central Pentagonal punch plus several banker's marks
    Rev: Blank
    Ref: Hirano Type I.8.29
    Coinage from the Ghaghara Gandak River region.
    Buddha Coin - struck during his lifetime and from the Janapada that he was Prince before becoming the Enlightened One.
    Rare - Less than 20 known.

    At this time, any of the 16 "Janapada" was defined as a tribe, country, kingdom, or a republic in northern India. Shakya was a Republic (ah, I love the Republics!), in northern India near present day Nepal.


    upload_2016-4-28_20-19-0.png upload_2016-4-28_20-18-4.png
    China
    Western Han Dynasty
    206 BCE - 25 CE
    4 Zhu
    Obv: Yan Xiang
    Rev: Shi Zhu
    Ref: Hartill 13.53 except with hanger (like H.13.57) below (unlisted)
    Rare

    HEY @Mikey Zee ... this ain't a washer!!! :D


    upload_2016-4-28_20-23-34.png
    Roman Republic
    Anonymous 157-156 BCE
    AE triens (21.7 mm, 6.72 g, 1 h)
    Rome mint.
    Obv: Helmeted head of Minerva right; four pellets above
    Rev: ROMA, prow of galley right; four pellets below.
    Ref: Crawford 198B/3; Sydenham 302b. VF,
    Comment: cleaned.
    Very Rare

    upload_2016-4-28_20-29-34.png
    Sri Lanka, Anuradhapura
    Anonymous, 1st C. BCE
    PB 1/8 Lakshmi
    1.1g, 14.1mm x 7.8mm
    RARE
    OBV: Hindu Goddess Lakshmi facing. She is the goddess of wealth, fortune, and prosperity. She was a beauty and the wife of Vishnu
    REV: (blank)
     
  17. Prokles

    Prokles Well-Known Member

    Woooooooow! The tetradrachm of Katane is really beautifull! I love the style of this coin.
    At the same period, the city of Elis (Olympia) struck staters with the same pattern on the reverse (i.e. with the Nikè running left). For comparison (BCD Peloponnesos 7): 28-04-2016 20-25-26.jpg
     
  18. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Wow, Brian, the Trisekles looks like the monogram for 'SC' (Senatas Consulto) as a mis-strike! Really interesting!
     
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  19. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Probably as predicted, I have no fricken idea which one of my coins is actually the rarest ...

    Ummm, but I do know that I've never seen one of you dudes post one of these cool early Rhodes babies (yah, I love this coin)

    Hey, it may not be my most expensive coin, but again, I've never seen one these babies "and" David Sear gave it the thumbs-up!! (chicken-dinna)

    rhodesa.jpg rhodesb.jpg

    => oh, and these two are probably also amongst (among?) my rarest as well ... 100 oh boy.jpg 5french.jpg
     
    Last edited: Apr 28, 2016
  20. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Oops, forgot to add this one since it would round out what looks like my "everywhere rare" collection niche...

    upload_2016-4-28_20-50-15.png
    Roman Empire
    Johannes
    AE nummus
    Obv: DN IOHANN-ES PF AVG, pearl-diademed, draped bust right
    Rev: SALVS REI-PVBLICAE, Victory holding trophy and dragging captive, Chi-Rho to left
    RM in ex, Rome mint (struck 423-425 AD)
    Ref: RIC X 1913
    Rare Emperor
    Ex: @ValiantKnight
     
  21. ValiantKnight

    ValiantKnight Well-Known Member

    My top rarest rulers (in no particular order):

    Jovinus, Western Roman Empire
    AR siliqua
    Obv: D N IOVIN-VS PF AVG, Pearl-diademed, draped, and cuirassed bust right
    Rev: VICTOR-IA AVGG, Roma seated left on stylized cuirass, holding Victory on globe and reversed spear
    Mint: Lugdunum (Mintmark: SMLDV); struck 411-413 AD
    Ref: RIC X 1717

    [​IMG]

    Galla Placidia, Western Roman Empire
    AE nummus
    Obv: D N GALLA PLA-CIDIA P F AVG, female, pearl-diademed bust right, wearing necklace and earrings
    Rev: SALVS REI-PVBLICE around cross, T in left field
    Mint: Rome; Mintmark: RM in ex
    Ref: RIC X 2111

    [​IMG]

    Majorian, Western Roman Empire
    AE nummus
    Obv: D N IVL MAIORIANVS P F AVG, pearl-diademed, draped bust right
    Rev: VICTORI-A AVGGG, Victory advancing right, holding palm branch and trophy
    Mint: Milan; Mintmark: MD; struck 457-461 AD
    Ref: RIC X 2642

    [​IMG]

    Libius Severus, Western Roman Empire
    AE nummus
    Obv: D N LIBIVS SEVERVS P F AVG, pearl-diademed, draped bust right
    Rev: Monogram of Ricimer within wreath
    Mint: Rome; struck 461-467 AD (Libius Severus reigned 461-465 AD)
    Ref: RIC X 2715

    [​IMG]

    Aelia Verina, Eastern Roman Empire
    AE2
    Obv: AEL VERINA AVG, diademed, draped bust right
    Rev: SALVS RE-PVBLICAE, Victory seated right, inscribing chi-rho on shield
    Mint: Constantinople (Mintmark: CONE in ex)
    Ref: RIC X 656

    [​IMG]
     
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