Help me identify this coin

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by steve.e, Jul 3, 2017.

  1. steve.e

    steve.e Cherry picker

    Picked this up for a buck.
    Did I do ok? And should I soak this in olive oil? 20170703_085023.jpg 20170703_084926.jpg
    Any info appreciated.
     
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  3. lehmansterms

    lehmansterms Many view intelligence as a hideous deformity

    Appears from the reverse to be a SOLI INVICTO COMITI follis - These were issued for the houses of both Constantine and Licinius
    If you could get a photo of the obverse with the legend fragment in-focus and no camera movement during the shutter, it might be possible to tell you who issued it.
     
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  4. PaulD48

    PaulD48 New Member

    Possibly arcadius or emperor around that time. Possibly Saturn but most likely Jupiter on reverse. Could. Be theodocius
     
  5. Victor_Clark

    Victor_Clark all my best friends are dead Romans Dealer

    It's Crispus, with a CLARITAS REIPVBLICAE reverse, like the coin below. In the condition your coin is in, it's certainly not worth more than a dollar. There is nothing you could soak it in that would help...not even holy water; as I can see from the picture that surface is actually flaking away.

    _trier_RIC_176.jpg
     
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  6. lehmansterms

    lehmansterms Many view intelligence as a hideous deformity

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  7. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    i wouldn't soak it, like Victor said, it's flaking away. i'd leave it like it is.
     
  8. steve.e

    steve.e Cherry picker

    Thanks everyone!! It's a lot smaller than than the coin with the link. It's only 2.2 grams. Do you know the years these were minted?
     
  9. Victor_Clark

    Victor_Clark all my best friends are dead Romans Dealer

    It was struck A.D. 317- 318 from Trier, Germany. Weights vary a lot on LRB's, the average for these is circa 4 grams. Yours is also worn and has a piece missing.
     
  10. lehmansterms

    lehmansterms Many view intelligence as a hideous deformity

    Since it's Crispus, it can be no later than 326. Without digging around in some books, it's hard to be more precise than that - particularly since we can't read the (exergual) mint mark on your piece (although the "F - T" in the fields makes it look like a Western mint) and the minting years for a type might vary a little from mint to mint.

    Okay, I had to check - with F - T in the field it's from the mint of Trier and dates to 317/18; Cf. RIC VII p. 177, 175-8 & 182
    That would put it right at the end of the era of the follis. In 318 Constantine introduced a new silvered billon coin, similar in size to the follis, but a bit more substantial. Also the new centenionales introduced in 318 tended to have civic or military reverses, shunning the former tradition of pagan deities, as behooved the first emperor to legalize Christianity.
     
  11. Victor_Clark

    Victor_Clark all my best friends are dead Romans Dealer

    I thought that I had already posted that information.
     
  12. steve.e

    steve.e Cherry picker

    Thanks guys! It's definitely worth a dollar to me.
     
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