A couple of coins to ID

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by daveydempsey, Aug 30, 2020.

  1. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Well-Known Member

    I got these in a deceased estate along with a large collection of world coins and some war medals.

    All I know is the first one is BC

    20200830_193222.jpg

    20200830_193257.jpg

    20200830_193404.jpg



    Second one looks to be Roman and could be silver however it may have been dipped.

    20200830_193455.jpg

    20200830_193541.jpg

    20200830_193437.jpg



    They were in a boxed display with two others titled "Four Millenniums of Coinage" no COA or ID except the receipt of purchase which was £360 ($480) in 2007, a London Mint Office (private company) rip off for sure.


    20200830_193648.jpg
     
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  3. Alex22

    Alex22 Active Member

    The first one is a Parthian coin, seems of the same type I posted yesterday.

    Drachm of Mithridates III, king of Parthia, 87 BC - 79 BC, Ekbatana mint, Sellwood.31.6 (as Orodes I); Shore.123 (as Orodes I). Obv.: diademed and draped bust of Mithridates III to left, wearing tiara decorated with a star. Rev.: BAΣIΛEΩΣ/MEΓAΛOY (top) APΣ-AKOY (right) AYTOKPATOPOΣ/ΦIΛOΠATOPOΣ (bottom) EΠIΦANOYΣ/ΦIΛEΛΛHNOΣ (left), Arsakes I seated right, holding a bow.

    The second one is a denarius of Septimius Severus from Roman Empire. It is one of the below types:
    http://numismatics.org/ocre/id/ric.4.ss.122C
    http://numismatics.org/ocre/id/ric.4.ss.500

    Edit: @maridvnvm pointed out below that the Roman coin is from the Rome mint (RIC.IV.122), hence check out the first link for its full details.
     
    Last edited: Aug 30, 2020
  4. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Jeez, took the "whiz kids" 24 minutes...these guys are incredible!
     
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  5. Alex22

    Alex22 Active Member

    @Kentucky Owing to the internet and sites like this as a platform, and, importantly, people like you who generously share their knowledge and expertise through that platform and educate us!
     
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  6. maridvnvm

    maridvnvm Well-Known Member

    It is Rome mint (122) rather than Laodicea (500)
     
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  7. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Well-Known Member

    Thanks guys, its appreciated.
     
  8. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    My knowledge is worth what I charge for it... :) sometimes I'm even right!
     
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  9. seth77

    seth77 Well-Known Member

    The small medieval one is possibly a denaro piccolo from Verona around mid 13th century, minted under Frederick II of Svevia or later.
     
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  10. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    This is not an exact match but was $44 in 1993 (ex. Fred Shore)
    op0100bb0711.jpg

    This (also a minor variant) was $35 in 1997. (What mint?)
    rj4570bb1350.jpg

    I hope those two modern coins were worth the remainder. In 2007, I suspect the coins were about $100 and the packaging about $380 which was pretty standard then for things like this sold to non collectors. The overexposed photos make it hard to compare the coins but I think it is safe to say the 2020 value is still nowhere near the price paid in 2007. Are people still marketing such cardboard packs or has that gone out of fashion?
     
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  11. seth77

    seth77 Well-Known Member

    Also, between the four coins presented there are not four millennia of anything.
     
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  12. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    There are four coins, each coin from a millennium, so I guess you have “four coins from assorted millenia”
     
  13. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Well-Known Member

    I think you are bang on.
     
  14. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Well-Known Member

    The London Mint Office are notorious for scamming the gullible.
    I found many receipts for coins the guy bought and the prices were akin to robbery.
    He paid £45 for a 1967 GB Halfpenny and a 1971 GB Penny.
    I scrap those in bulk for the copper.
     
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