Authentication and identification please

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by noname, Jun 3, 2016.

?

Authentic or not

  1. fake

    1 vote(s)
    25.0%
  2. real

    3 vote(s)
    75.0%
  1. noname

    noname Well-Known Member

    I purchased these 3 Greek(?)ish silvers, at the San francisco coin bourse back in 2015. I'm not sure of ID and if its authentic or not, I'd like help with these coins. These coins don't sound like silver when dropped, Thanks.

    PS I am a huge noob at Greek coins
     

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  3. AngelDeath

    AngelDeath Well-Known Member

    Every town Magistrate had their own coins minted. There was NO uniformity of coinage across ancient Greece.

    I have a disc with all the coins cataloged in the British Museum you can go numb with all the variations.

    Honestly there is something(based on the pictures) that would keep me from buying them.
     
    noname likes this.
  4. THCoins

    THCoins Well-Known Member

    The basic design is Seleukid (Antiochus). Your photos are terrible, so any judgement whether these are genuine or not is a wild guess.
     
    Nicholas Molinari likes this.
  5. noname

    noname Well-Known Member

    Yeah I suck at photos
     
  6. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

    The "ring" test is not valid for most ancient coins.
     
    Carthago likes this.
  7. Pishpash

    Pishpash Well-Known Member

    Not the best way to treat ancients, you might find that dropping the coin might cause it to shatter.
     
    Carthago and Magnus Maximus like this.
  8. AngelDeath

    AngelDeath Well-Known Member

    The "ring" test is not valid for most ancient coins.

    The silver can crystallize... I know this from experience... I dissected an Alexander the Great Silver. (don't shoot me) lol
     
    Nicholas Molinari and Alegandron like this.
  9. Mikey Zee

    Mikey Zee Delenda Est Carthago

    I agree.....

    I'd want a far closer and clearer look before making any judgements....but I'm leaning towards genuine---but then there's always the added issue of condition and price. Comfortably determining genuineness from poor photos of coins in poor condition is near impossible. But, once again, with the huge amounts of coins available these days, if there's any real doubt pass them by.
     
    Nicholas Molinari likes this.
  10. Magnus Maximus

    Magnus Maximus Dulce et Decorum est....

    I am going to lean toward calling them legit as well, though you really need better photos.
     
  11. Ken Dorney

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

    I can read "Antiochos" on two of them, cant read the other specifically, so you know you have Seleucid drachms there. That will get you in the right direction. Search some of the databases. I'd look them up, but alas, its the weekend! Try searching on http:/www.acsearch.info with 'seleucid drachm' as the parameters. You should be able to attribute them to specifics.
     
    noname likes this.
  12. noname

    noname Well-Known Member

    Hope these pictures are better
     

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  13. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    Blasphemy! Someone convene the Numismatic Inquisition. We have someone guilty of crimes against Alexander the Great.
     
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