Once again, I am super jealous of your newest purchase, Deacon Ray! I ask forgiveness. This coin is on the top of my wish list for next year! My oldest coin is the same kind as Mikey's: Here is bro's: It's a tiny thing, 4.5mm from about 625 BC. Erin
I do like these siglos! The countermarks on them are always interesting too (your side-mark is really fascinating @Andres2 !). Nice coin @Deacon Ray ! Persian Empire Darius I to Xerxes II, r. 485-420 B.C. Sardes Mint, AR Siglos, 15.87mm x 5.6 grams Obv.: King running right holding spear and bow Rev.: Incuse punch Ref.: SGCV 3428, Carradice Type IIIb, Group A/B I might need to redo that photo... I don't think the coin is that dark.
OLDEST EGYPT: Egypt SCARAB Middle Kingdom 2065-1650 BCE Scarabaeus Sphinx OLDEST CHINA: China Shang Dyn 1766-1154 BCE Ant Nose Ge Liu Zhu 2.6g 19-5x11 very scarce H 1.10 OLDEST WESTERN: (also my smallest diameter) Ionia AR Tetartemorion 4mm 0.13g 530-500 BCE Rosette - Incuse sq punch 5 pellets SNG von Aulock 1807 Iona Kolophon AR Tetartemorion 530-520 BCE Archaic Apollo Incuse Punch 0.15g 4.5mm- SNG Kayhan 343 OLDEST GOLD: PERSIA Achaemenid Daris I-Xerxes II 485-420 BCE AV Daric 14mm 8.3g LydoMilesian Sardes king wearing kidaris kandys quiver spear bow Incuse Carr Type IIIb Group A-B pl XIII 27 (FIRST full Gold coin used in commerce or transactions between states)
I have both of the more common designs of Persian sigloi, the "king with bow and spear" and the "king with bow and dagger":
Nice coin and of course another fabulous D-Ray graphic! My oldest coin: KINGS OF LYDIA, temp. Ardys - Alyattes c. 630s-564/53 BCE (dates from a CNG listing of a similar coin*; I do not have the reference books nor have I read the latest thoughts) Electrum trite, 4.8 gm, 13.4 mm. Sardes mint. Obv: head of roaring lion right, sun with four rays on forehead Rev: two incuse square punches Ref: Weidauer Group XV, 64; BMC 2 * "Recent research (mostly forthcoming in publication, but cf. White Gold p. 20) has shown that the earliest Lydian electrum had begun before circa 630 BC, predating our traditional attribution to Alyattes. This redating affects Weidauer Groups XV, XVII, and XVIII, as well as the lion paw fractions and boar head coins that Spier linked to the early Lydian coinage (see the following lot)."
Great coin Ray and everyone else. This one is currently my oldest until my recent auction wins get here. Lucania, Metapontum, 510 - 470 BC Silver Stater, 25mm, 7.71 grams Ear of barley with six grains either side / Incuse of obverse. HN Italy1482
My oldest coin: Athens AR Tetradrachm 353 - c. 340 B.C.; 16.873g, 25.8mm Obv: head of Athena right with eye seen in true profile, wearing crested helmet ornamented with three olive leaves and pi-style floral scroll. Rev: owl standing right, head facing, to right AQE in large lettering, to left olive sprig and crescent. SNG Cop 63
Some real oldies but goodies in this thread APOLLONIA PONTIKA AR Hemiobol OBVERSE: Anchor, A in field REVERSE: Swastika with two parallel lines in each quadrant Struck at Apollonia Pontika, circa 500BC .28g, 6.54mm SNG BM 149; Moushmov 3146 ex. Aegean Numismaics
. Ionia, Miletos AR 6th century BC Lion right, roaring head turned back left/ star and pellets 9mm .9g
Great coins everyone and as always a beautiful presentation @Deacon Ray ! Here is my Persian Siglos My oldest is probably my Athenia Tetradrachm Ca. 454-404 B.C.
That's a real beauty @DBDc80, and pouts my Trihemiobol to shame. THESSALY, LARISSA AR Trihemiobol OBVERSE: Head of nymph Larissa three-quarter facing left in necklace, hair confined by fillet & floating loosely, with ampyx in front REVERSE: ΛAPI (Laris) above, horse feeding right. Struck at Larissa 395-344 BC .75g, 10mm SNG Cop 135