Faustina the younger

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by expat, Jul 27, 2023.

  1. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    Added this coin to an order because it is the first Faustina II I have. For less than 40 Euros I couldn´t resist.
    Faustina Junior. Augusta, AD 147-175. Orichalcum Dupondius
    Rome mint. Struck under Marcus Aurelius, circa AD 170-175/6.
    Obv. FAUSTINA AUGUSTA. Draped bust right. Hair curls down cheek, hair in low chignon fastened with band of pearls.
    Rev. JUNO standing left, holding patera and scepter; at feet to left, peacock standing left, head right. SC across fields.
    (25mm, 11.53 g.) RIC III 1647 (Aurelius)
    Gx9azQQ6M7tmwT4N3frRBd2g5dTAN8 - Copy.jpg
    Post your Faustinas
     
    Last edited: Jul 27, 2023
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Curtis

    Curtis Well-Known Member

    Nice Dupondius!

    Here's my favorite Imperial coin of Faustina Jr. I bought this one because the portrait struck me as exceptionally beautiful & lifelike, unusually so for this period:

    Faustina II HILARITAS Ex-Artemide Aste e11-450.jpg

    My favorite bronze of Faustina II is this countermarked Provincial AE29 from Cilicia, Hierapolis-Castabala:
    Faustina II (LARGE), Cilicia, Hierapolis-Castabala, von Aulock 5572, Levante 1586.jpg
    That specimen has been illustrated in many volumes, including: SNG von Aulock 5572 = Robert (1964) 27, pl. XXVI.77 = SNG Levante 1586 = RPC IV.3 4976 (temporary), ex. 6; and cited in many others, including: Howgego GIC 686 (as Robert 77); Lindgren III p. 47 (type 840 citing Levante 1586); Berens & Geske (2004) page 40, note 11.


    I love having as many animals as possible on ancient coins, so I like the Juno with Peacock type. I've got the same reverse, but not on a Faustina; mine's on a Julia Domna Sestertius (albeit with no legends on the flan!):
    Julia Domna Sestertius Juno E.png
     
  4. Cherd

    Cherd Junior Member

    My Faustina Jr is a sestertius. It reminds me that I really need to figure out a way to polish scratches out of slabs! :bag:
    upload_2023-7-27_14-10-25.png
     
  5. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    @Curtis that is a lifelike portrait, wonderful
     
    Curtis likes this.
  6. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    A lot of people use the product that reduces scratches on car headlight glass.
     
    paschka, Cherd and Curtis like this.
  7. Dafydd

    Dafydd Supporter! Supporter

    Beautiful coin. My answer would be crack it open and enjoy it physically and keep the plastic for provenance and verification. No more irritating scratches and I am sure Bronze is more durable in comparison to plastic.
     
    Cherd likes this.
  8. Cherd

    Cherd Junior Member

    Thanks for the tip, I'll have to give that a go. I've tried toothpaste a few times and, while it does result in some improvement, it's not quite aggressive enough to fix anything substantial.

    If I cracked-out my coins then my tidy storage and label referencing system would fall apart! :(

    upload_2023-7-27_19-10-16.png

    Honestly, if NGC didn't grade ancients then I would purchase generic slabs and encase them all myself. Call me crazy, but I simply prefer the coins mounted in plastic as opposed to loose :wacky:.
     
  9. cmezner

    cmezner do ut des Supporter

    My quite worn Faustina II, which I got because I liked the griffin :D

    Æ Drachm
    Egypt, Alexandria, 150- 151 AD Dated I∆ = RY 14 of Antoninus Pius
    33 mm; 26.02 g, 12h
    RPC IV.4 13720 (temporary); Köln 1957 var. (placement of date); Dattari 3317; K&G 38.62; Emmett 1986.14; Geißen 1957; Milne 2124;

    Ob.: ΦAVCTINA CЄB CЄB ЄVCЄB ΘVΓ, draped bust right, her hair tied up in a bun with a single strand of pearls
    Rev.: Griffin, as Nemesis, seated right with left forepaw on wheel; I∆ (date) above, L in exergue.

    Picture courtesy CNG

    upload_2023-7-27_23-39-57.png
     
  10. Curtis

    Curtis Well-Known Member

    That is a great coin, @cmezner ! Apologies for the digression, but the Alexandria Griffins are a special series. The wheel indicates it's not just any Griffin, but Nemesis-as-Griffin.

    Kerry Wetterstrom may have written first about that re: Alexandrian coins. See his brief essay, "Nemesis as Portrayed on Roman Coinage," in CNR XV.1 (Winter 1990, p. 43). (Elsewhere in Classical art the connection was well known: e.g., extended commentary on Getty's mosaic from Roman Syria.)

    Also, a great thread started by Al Kowsky in 2020 discussing that topic and w/ many Griffins. (I remember because I ended up buying the OP coin when he parted with it a year or so later!) https://www.cointalk.com/threads/egyptian-drachm-with-a-provenance.354986/
     
    cmezner, Cherd, paschka and 2 others like this.
  11. Mr.MonkeySwag96

    Mr.MonkeySwag96 Well-Known Member

    upload_2023-7-29_3-6-21.jpeg

    AR Denarius 18mm. 3.10g. Rome Mint 156-175 A.D. Draped bust r., wearing stephane. FAVSTINA AVGVSTA Juno, veiled, seated l. on low seat, holding patera and sceptre, peacock at feet. IVNONI REGINAE RIC III 698; RSC II 145
     
  12. robinjojo

    robinjojo Well-Known Member

    That's a nice Faustina II dupondius for under 40 euros, very nicely centered!

    Here's a sestertius that came by way of Roma, E-Sale 94, lot 900.

    Faustina II (wife of M. Aurelius) Æ Sestertius. Rome, AD 170-175/6. FAVSTINA AVGVSTA, draped bust to right / MATR[I MAG]NAE, Cybele seated to right, holding drum on knee, between two lions seated to right; SC in exergue. RIC III 1663 (Aurelius); C. 169; Banti 92; BMCRE 993. 25.72g, 32mm, 6h.

    From the Antonio Carmona Collection.

    Faustina II Æ Sestertius. Rome, AD 170-175-6  MATR[I MAG]NAE RIC III 1663 (Aurelius) 25.72g.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jul 30, 2023
  13. Curtisimo

    Curtisimo the Great(ish)

    Great coins all. Here is my Faustina the Younger.

    Faustina_II_Ses_Diana.jpeg
    Roman Empire
    Faustina II, daughter of Antoninus Pius and wife of Marcus Aurelius
    AE Sestertius, Rome mint, struck ca. AD 156
    Dia.: 33mm
    Wt.: 26.11g
    Obv.: FAVSTINA AVGVSTA AVG PII F; Draped bust right
    Rev.: S-C; Diana standing left, holding bow and arrow
    Ref.: C 206; RIC A. Pius 1383; BMCRE 2194
    From a European Collection formed in the 1980s with tag
     
    Marsyas Mike, Curtis, expat and 4 others like this.
  14. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    That is the most realistic portrait of Faustina II I've ever seen @Curtisimo
     
    Curtis, Curtisimo and expat like this.
  15. GinoLR

    GinoLR Well-Known Member

    upload_2023-7-31_16-9-58.png
    A sestertius with Fecunditas... She had 13 kids !!! She could have deserved a prize.
     
  16. Curtis

    Curtis Well-Known Member

    Hey @cmezner --

    I'm fairly confident I've found a bit of additional provenance for your Faustina Drachm. CNG only gave "Rocky Mountain Collection of Alexandrian" but this coin was previously sold at Antioch Associates Buy-Bid Sale 40 (29 July 2002), Lot 140. (Henry Clay Lindgren's [1914-2005] firm set up to sell his collection duplicates.)

    20230827_230137.jpg
    20230827_225815.jpg

    Unfortunately Lindgren didn't use the best photos (badly clipped by hand with scissors in those days) or provide weights, but the longer you compare the edge cracks & wear pattern etc., the more clear it'll be that it's the same coin. Differences are due to photo technology of the time.

    It's not specifically stated, and it's not published in his books (I don't think), but it's presumably from the Henry Clay Lindgren Collection. At this time he had abandoned his plans for volume 4 of his collection & was selling them through Antioch, which he repeatedly wrote he had founded to sell his personal collection. (He was a retired academic psychologist by profession.)
    20230827_225724.jpg
     
  17. cmezner

    cmezner do ut des Supporter

    You are really impressive @Curtis! I'm forever grateful for all your information.
     
    Curtis, expat and Curtisimo like this.
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page