Popular Ancient Coins

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by CoinBlazer, Jun 4, 2018.

  1. CoinBlazer

    CoinBlazer Numismatic Enthusiast

    So in the US coin collector spectrum, there are famous coins such as the 1913 Nickel and '33 Double Eagle.
    What ancient coins fall into this category of "super rarities"?
     
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  3. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Too many to name! Also, rarity alone is not a huge driver of value unless combined with other factors such as historical interest, eye appeal, etc.
     
    Ryro, Johndakerftw, Andres2 and 3 others like this.
  4. CoinBlazer

    CoinBlazer Numismatic Enthusiast

    Can you give me a couple of examples or a website?
     
  5. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    How about an Ides of March Brutus coin:
    th.jpg
     
  6. Ed Snible

    Ed Snible Well-Known Member

    Non-unique popular rarities:

    EID MAR denarius (shown above).
    Athenian Dekadrachm.
    Noah's Ark bronze
    Menorah bronze
    Poros Dekadrachm
    "Badge of Phanes"
     
  7. CoinBlazer

    CoinBlazer Numismatic Enthusiast

    What is Noahs Ark Bronze?
     
  8. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Although whether or not some of these are true rarities depends on if you define rare as the number of known examples or by the deficit of examples relative to the number of collectors who want one.
     
    ominus1 likes this.
  9. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

  10. RAGNAROK

    RAGNAROK Naebody chaws me wi impunitY

    Gold quaternion of Augustus:
    avg.jpeg
    :rolleyes::jawdrop:
     
    Sallent, Ryro, Deacon Ray and 7 others like this.
  11. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

  12. AncientJoe

    AncientJoe Well-Known Member

    There are a couple parameters to take into account here. Harlan Berk's "100 Greatest Ancient Coins" book is a decent sampling which probably accomplishes what you're looking for but I'll offer a bit of differing context.

    I'm creating arbitrary terminology in this post but hopefully it is sufficiently illustrative. I've collected high end US coins and currently collect high end ancients so some parallels might be helpful.

    Like in US coins, there are "super rarity" types and individual "super coins". The former are the coins which are exceptionally rare and exceptionally in-demand and therefore exceptionally expensive, occupying the nosebleed range of $500K-2M.

    Ancient coins are, in general, less expensive than US coins but some can still be very expensive. In this tier I'd put the Agrigentum dekadrachm, Athens gold staters, Brutus aurei, gold medallions, Flamininus staters, Athens dekadrachms, and a couple other types.

    To me, these are the 1913 Liberty Nickels of the ancient world.

    I'd define the "super coins" range as exceptional examples of in-demand types which aren't overall that rare (relatively speaking: some are still just in the double digits of population). These tend to fall in the $100K-500K range and include coins like the Eid Mar denarii, Kimon/Euainetos dekadrachms, Colosseum sestertii, Naxos tetradrachms, Phanes trites/staters, Julius Caesar portrait aurei, and others.

    These are the "MS Chain Cents", half dismes, and "MS 1795 $10s" of the ancient world. The nicest examples will sell for significant premiums over average/below average coins but they are always expensive.

    The next tier represents the coins in broad demand that aren't quite as expensive but still desirable, like coins of Cleopatra (including "Aegypto Capta"), Hannibal, Noah's Ark, Alexander the Great, Constantine the Great, architectural depictions, etc.

    There are expensive and inexpensive versions of these types but they make up the "meat" of the "100 Greatest Ancients" book. They are the XF Chain Cents, AU 1795 $5s, and the MS64 High Relief St Gaudens of ancients.

    It's probably worth saying that, with ancients, you can get a ton of historical "bang for your buck". A set including Alexander the Great, Cleopatra, Brutus, and Julius Caesar can be assembled for a bit over $1K and will produce the desired jaw-drop from the average non-collector. Or, you can assemble the same set with different types for $2 million and probably receive the same response from that non-collector.
     
    Last edited: Jun 4, 2018
  13. Alegandron

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

    I like my budget version:

    Rimp AR Denarius AR Brutus EID MAR COPY by Slavei duplicate ex FSR 103.jpg
    Rimp AR Denarius AR Brutus EID MAR - Slavei duplicate ex FSR 103

    Joe:
    I do not collect Modern US anymore, save for the occassional surgical-strike captures for the Grandkids, but yours is a GREAT write-up and analogy! Well-done and thanks for that!

    I collect historically, so your last paragraph NAILS it! It is fun to show someone a jaw-dropper, even if it is high-priced or budget!
     
    Last edited: Jun 4, 2018
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  14. IdesOfMarch01

    IdesOfMarch01 Well-Known Member

    This is a very articulate differentiation between collecting ancient vs. modern coins, at least to the extent that I understand/remember when I collected modern coins.

    I will add one overall thought about the differences: rarity is common among ancient coins. Thus, the major factor in an ancient coin's desirability (which is probably over 50% of its price) is the coin's historical context, not just its rarity or uniqueness. A unique ancient coin that has little or no historical significance will not be widely sought by collectors, and the main (and possibly only) factor in its price will be its condition. Conversely, an ancient coin that has a well-known historical significance, such as the Tiberius "tribute penny" denarius, will command unusually high prices despite its commonness and easy availability. This is the salient difference (in my opinion) from modern coins, which mostly have little or no historical significance per se.
     
    Theodosius, CoinBlazer and Orfew like this.
  15. Jwt708

    Jwt708 Well-Known Member

    AncientJoe and IdesOfMarch01 have done a great job of answering this question.
     
  16. roger conner

    roger conner New Member

    can someone help me identify this coin, im at a loss CM180605-003112001.jpg
     
  17. roger conner

    roger conner New Member

  18. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Please remove the coin from its holder (it's only worth a dollar, if that--I'm not kidding) and photograph both sides and then post it in a separate thread called "Unidentified late Roman bronze." I'm sure you'll have your answer within a few hours.
     
    RAGNAROK likes this.
  19. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    You have an Ides of March? :eek:

    Just kidding, but I do hope you get the chance to own one someday. I'd certainly come to pay you a visit to hold that beauty for a few minutes.
     
    Last edited: Jun 5, 2018
  20. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    If I ever win a sizeable lottery and have a few million dollars to spare, I'd definitely put an Athenian Decadrachm on my want list. Might take a while as there are only around 30 or so on the market, but yeah, this is what I'd want.

    4865132514_e1f807fee5_b.jpg
     
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