A couple of sestertii featuring Ceres

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Roman Collector, Nov 26, 2019.

  1. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    A couple of new acquisitions for my Antonine women collection. They both feature Ceres and her attributes. Ceres has three main attributes: corn ears, which symbolize her role as the goddess of agriculture, a torch with which she searches after her daughter Proserpina in the underworld, and a cista mystica, in which the sacred utensils connected with her cult were carried in procession.* Alternatively, the cista (the Latin word for a cylindrical basket) may simply be a reference to agriculture, such baskets being used to carry grain.

    Post your coins with Ceres, bronzes of Antonine women, or anything you feel is relevant.

    Faustina Sr AVGVSTA Ceres long torch sestertius.jpg
    Faustina I, AD 138-141.
    Roman orichalcum sestertius, 25.61 g, 33 mm.
    Rome, AD 150-161.
    Obv: DIVA FAVSTINA, bare-headed and draped bust, right.
    Rev: AVGVSTA S C, Ceres standing left, holding corn ears and long torch.
    Refs: RIC 1116; BMCRE 1509-11; Cohen 79; RCV 4614; Strack 1286.
    Notes: A similar design (RIC 1117) depicts the goddess holding corn ears and a short torch.

    Lucilla CERES sestertius.jpg
    Lucilla, AD 164-169.
    Roman orichalcum sestertius, 20.36 g, 31 mm.
    Rome, AD 166-169.
    Obv: LVCILLA AVGVSTA,
    bare-headed and draped bust, right.
    Rev: CERES S C, Ceres, veiled and draped, seated right on cista, holding corn-ears in right hand and short torch in left hand.
    Refs: RIC 1728; BMCRE 1194-96; Cohen 2; RCV 5496; MIR 24.

    ~~~

    *White, KD. Farm Equipment of the Roman World. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1975, p. 64. This is a fascinating book. It is the companion volume to White's earlier (1967) Agricultural Implements of the Roman World. This volume deals with equipment and instruments used in processing and storage of agricultural produce as opposed to cultivation.
     
    Last edited: Nov 26, 2019
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  3. thejewk

    thejewk Well-Known Member

    Very nice RC, I love the Lucilla sestertius especially. Nice patina and overall eye appeal, and well rendered overall. I also like the slightly wonky obverse legend.
     
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  4. ominus1

    ominus1 Well-Known Member

    very kool RC..:)..i'm gussing this is Ceres...and also guessing she's holding winged Victory(?)... but i can convince meself of anything..for a minute :D Faustina l dupondius 001.JPG Faustina l dupondius 003.JPG
     
  5. Al Kowsky

    Al Kowsky Well-Known Member

    R.C. They're both great pickups :D, but the reverse on the Lucilla bronze is special.
     
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  6. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Vesta! Like this one:

    [​IMG]
    Faustina Senior, AD 138-141.
    Roman orichalcum sestertius, 24.57 g, 32.0 mm.
    Rome, AD 147-161.
    Obv: DIVA FAVSTINA, bare-headed and draped bust, right.
    Rev: AVGVSTA S C, Vesta veiled, standing left, holding palladium and scepter.
    Refs: RIC 1124; BMCRE 1519; RCV 4617.

    Middle bronze:

    [​IMG]
    As or dupondius, 10.37 g, 25.4 mm, 5 h. RIC 1179; BMCRE 1582; RCV --.
     
  7. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

  8. ominus1

    ominus1 Well-Known Member

    ah! ok, thanks for reenlightening me...again :)
     
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  9. Sulla80

    Sulla80 Well-Known Member

    @Roman Collector - nice coins - Lucilla in particular. While I have some Ceres, I will share this coin, recently purchased, with her Greek counterpart: Demeter with the attributes of torch and grain. It is certain that your posts of similar coins have influenced my interest in this coin. The bewildering number of variations in these coins and die sharing between cities and numbers minted make these interesting to me. I have had a hard time finding others like this one from Odessos. Much easier to find this Demeter reverse combined with "Gordian III and Serapis" or "Gordian alone" on the obverse. The stephane on Demeter looks crown-like. Gord and Tranq Demeter.jpg Moesia Inferior, Odessos, Gordian III and Tranquillina (238-244), Ae
    Obv: AYT K M ANT ΓΟΡΔΙΑΝΟC AVΓ CE / TRANKVΛ-ΛEINA, Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust of Gordian right vis-a-vis diademed and draped bust of Tranquillina left
    Rev: OΔHCCEITΩN, Demeter standing facing, head left, holding grain ears and long torch, E in field left.
    Ref: (edit to add reference to AMNG 2381)
    Image1.jpg

    This coin also is an obverse die match with this one from ACSearch with different reverse.
     
    Last edited: Nov 26, 2019
  10. Marsyas Mike

    Marsyas Mike Well-Known Member

    Those are both lovely, RC. This reminded me of a similar Faustina I (RIC 1118 - I think) that I posted a while back - a puzzler: https://www.cointalk.com/threads/faustina-i-sestertius-or-dupondius.317204/

    It is awfully light for a sestertius (13.70 grams), and awfully big for a dupondius (32 mm). It is very thin. You helped me out back then and that's the attribution I'm going with (thanks again, by the way).

    Faustina sest or what May 24 2018.jpg

    Faustina I Æ Sestertius
    (Struck on dupondius flan?)
    3rd Phase, part 2: wedding of Faustina II to M. Aurelius
    (c. 145-150 A.D.) Rome Mint

    [DIVA] FAVSTINA, draped bust right / AVGV[ST]A S-C, Ceres standing left with short torch and corn ears.
    RIC 1118; Cohen 88.
    (13.70 grams / 32 mm)
     
  11. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Faustina 1.jpg
    FAUSTINA Sr
    AE As
    OBVERSE: DIVA FAVSTINA, draped bust right
    REVERSE: AVGVSTA S-C, Ceres standing left holding torch & corn-ears
    Struck at Rome, 148-161AD
    13.5g, 27mm
    RIC 1171
     
  12. cmezner

    cmezner do ut des Supporter

    @Bing that is really a lovely and charming gaze on your Faustina :)
     
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  13. cmezner

    cmezner do ut des Supporter

    Only have a Trajan Sestertius with Ceres:

    Rome, 107 AD
    32 mm, 24.04 g
    Ref.: RIC II 479; Sear 3228 var; Cohen 369;

    Ob.: IMP CAES NERVAE TRAIANO AVG GER DAC P M TR P COS V P P Laureate head right
    Rev.: SPQR OPTIMO PRINCIPI S-C Ceres draped, standing left, holding corn-ears in right and long torch in left hand, modius at feet
    upload_2019-11-26_22-37-32.png upload_2019-11-26_22-37-55.png
     
  14. Archeocultura

    Archeocultura Well-Known Member

  15. Ancient Aussie

    Ancient Aussie Well-Known Member

    Galba Cer es. 2015-01-07 01.08.12-20.jpg
    Galba AE As, minted between July 68-Jan 69 AD, 29mm, 10.94gm, RIC 291.
     
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