My First Imitative

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Mat, Jun 3, 2019.

  1. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    After 10 years of collecting, I finally acquired my first Imitative.

    Picked it up from @John Anthony


    [​IMG]
    Roman Imitative Issue, (4th century A.D.)
    Æ12
    Minima Class
    O.: Bust right.
    R.: Falling Horseman // TC?
    1.0g
    12mm
    RIC VIII Arles 224
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    Nice. I remember seeing that when he posted it. I like how big his eye is.
     
  4. Severus Alexander

    Severus Alexander find me at NumisForums

    Cool!! Does this mean that next time I'm your Secret Saturn I can consider imitatives? ;)

    I recently got me a passel of 'em from the 3rd century:
    Screen Shot 2019-06-03 at 3.00.42 PM.jpg
     
  5. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Lol, sure. I never had any issues with them. I actually have bid on a few in years past but got skunked.

    I've owned Limes denarii, but not sure if that counts.
     
  6. Severus Alexander

    Severus Alexander find me at NumisForums

    I thought of it last time but when I looked through some of your posts, it seemed you weren't too keen. I guess I was mistaken! :happy:

    Limes sorta count, but only if you keep them. ;)
     
  7. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    I'm not into cash coins or Rudes. About it.
     
    Severus Alexander likes this.
  8. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    My favorite class of imitatives are those that were not copied or miscopied directly from a regular mint original. For example this Septimius Severus obverse reads L SEVLRS AVGVSTV. The regular mints always abbreviated AVG so this cutter knew what it meant even though he made a few other errors. The reverse is a good copy PART MAX PM TRP VIIII reversed exceptfor the V in VIIII which is upside down. Decent silver (not fourree) denarius. The style is nothing like any official mint.

    re3505fd3328.jpg
     
  9. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    Pretty cool coin and thanks for sharing it. At this point the "imitative" falling horseman types are more interesting to me than the Imperial issues.
     
  10. Ryro

    Ryro Trying to remove supporter status

    Some fun patination on it as well. Congrats!
    Here's one of my favorite barbarous beauties:
    F8FA1B67-7988-482B-B39F-462FBDACA7F7.png
     
  11. Parthicus

    Parthicus Well-Known Member

    I've posted it before, but here's a barbarous copy of a Constantine I coin. The designs aren't too bad, but try to read that inscription:
    Barbarous.jpg
     
  12. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    That's a cool little imitative coin @Mat ! I dig that bug eye portrait. A crazy looking LRB imitative coin is still on my list. Here an imitative celtic coin I that was once part of the mat collection!

    Capture.JPG

    CELTIC, Lower Danube, Uncertain tribe. 2nd century B.C. AR Drachm

    O: Head of Herakles wearing lionskin headdress knotted at throat, right. R: Zeus enthroned holding eagle. 17mm 3.42g Lanz 939 EX. mat!
     
  13. Alegandron

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

    Nice that you are “breaking your mold” @Mat, and capturing your first imitative! I always thought the Roman artwork on LRB’s and Byz coins were creepy, and a definite fall from the coinage from Earlier Days... however, imitative LRB’s are even more creepier/cruder to my eye!

    Here is one from the Republic, also absconded from the Guy who Imitates...

    An IMITATIVE:
    [​IMG]
    Imitating Octavian-M. Porcius Cato AR quinarius 13.89 mm 1.29g imitating Octavian r blundered legend - Victory seated r patera Cr 343-462 RARE
    Ex: @John Anthony
     
  14. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    I have a couple (I need to rephotograph them, though).

    Imitative of a Constantine:

    Constantine barbarous imitation.jpg

    Imitative radiate:

    Barbarous imitation radiate.jpg
     
  15. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

    Congrats @Mat . A neat little addition.

    IMG_2261.JPG

    Barbaric Imitation of Roman Constantius II Fallen Horseman Type. 4th century AD. AE 10mm (0.77 gm). Obv.: diademed, draped and cuirassed bust right. Rev.: Soldier spearing horseman.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page