Of the 48 coins that I bought for $5 each, I have 4 left to attribute. I’ve tried with WildWinds, ACSearch, and Google, but none have helped me with these coins. Could you all help? A Roman provincial. Philip II? Victory on the reverse. My searches did not reveal a match. Greek bronze. Obverse is Apollo. Reverse figure is unknown. Obverse is Pegasus with a club (?) below, and the reverse has a head in a box. I could not find an example on ACSearch. Obverse has a horse, and I don’t know what the reverse is. It looks like a box of some kind.
I wanna say that is Elagabalus with the ANTΩ on the right. Does victory have a faint altar on the left? Edit: Obverse seems to be AVT K M AVPH ANTΩNEINOC, laureate head of Elagabalus right.... My first inclination for location was Trajanopolis based on the appearance of the reverse legend staying with a TR, but just a guess. Edit 2: I'm seeing the reverse legend end with ΠOλITΩN. An example legend that ends with that is MAPKIANOΠOλITΩN which is Marcianopolis. Edit 3: maybe this one? https://www.acsearch.info/search.html?id=152940
That's correct. I have one issued by this same legate (Seleucus) but with Homonoia on the reverse. The inscriptions are similar to @TypeCoin971793 's: Elagabalus, AD 218-222. Roman provincial tetrassarion, 8.53 g, 24.2 mm, 7 h. Moesia Inferior, Marcianopolis, Legate Julius Antonius Seleucus, AD 218-222. Obv: ΑVΤ Κ Μ ΑVΡ ΑΝΤΩΝΕΙΝΟC, laureate head, right. Rev: VΠ Ιȣ ΑΝΤ CΕΛΕVΚȣ ΜΑΡΚΙΑΝΟΠΟΛΕΙΤΩΝ, Homonoia standing left, holding patera and cornucopiae. Refs: BMC 3.34, 47; AMNG (Pick) 856; Moushmov 633.
Here's what I could make out on the reverse: ΩN on left, ΛTΔ on top (or could be Γ/gamma not T?). It initially makes me think of Corinth because of the Pegasus. Could that be a dolphin below the Pegasus?