Identify these emperors, please!

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by joecoincollect, Dec 8, 2020.

  1. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

    I have some pretty worn coins but they’ve been hanging around and I was hoping someone might be able to recognize a bust. Sorry for the poor photos but I tried my best. I’ll post several pics, at different angles to help. I think one of them is Tiberius because of the hook nose (I think you’ll spot that one, but i could be wrong). The denarius im guessing is the co-emperor with Aurelius, I think his name was Lucius Verus. Or it could very well be Aurelius or his son without a beard. When I said worn down, a lot of it was from cleaning because many of them had bronze disease and I excised metal- i didnt know what else to do at time when i started collecting. Please feel free to post your worn down examples also, and perhaps others can help with those also. These coins deserve some love and attention too. 97376F7C-6B48-446A-9FB0-2DF04F3C9801.jpeg 6D9C816D-2CD0-4498-AFCF-26D486FF002E.jpeg FFFF9A25-782E-4C75-BBE8-BE22497581FC.jpeg ABA801CD-D486-47C3-ABB1-D264DA9FA7F5.jpeg 59F1BA8A-4641-4D2F-A8D4-40D55CE87AD0.jpeg B17A6B63-8AC3-4070-AB00-C0A38DACDBAF.jpeg 37100A53-699B-4E87-A966-6B82FECCAE10.jpeg 4960230A-B1F9-42C1-A513-93DC503A5001.jpeg
     
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  3. fomovore

    fomovore Active Member

    The leftmost bronze in the first photo looks like Augustus.
    The top right bronze in the same photo looks like Agrippa.
    The last photo looks like a provincial bronze of Caracalla.
     
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  4. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    Last edited: Dec 8, 2020
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  5. Justin Lee

    Justin Lee I learn by doing

    I see in the first 6-coin photo...
    Top row, left to right: Augustus, Hadrian, Augustus
    Bottom row, left to right: Marcus Aurelius, Trajan, Domitian
     
    Last edited: Dec 9, 2020
  6. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

    You guys are awesome. Thanks! These clues will help me immensely narrow things down
     
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  7. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    Agree with the above attributions. There is just enough there to make educated guesses as to which emperor it is.
     
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  8. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

    yes well said
     
  9. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

  10. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

  11. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

    ok, 3 more i forgot about. The brass one has a statue of a figure on a pillar; I remember seeing it before in a book but I forgot who it was. The obverse is inconclusive as you can see. The copper colored raw one is Vespasian I think, or could it be one of his sons? Finally, the one in the flip has some letters, but I’m stumped. Any help is appreciated
     
  12. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

  13. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    That reverse is most common for Nero and Trajan. And that’s not Nero.
     
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  14. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

    you’re right then. Thanks!
     
  15. Numisnewbiest

    Numisnewbiest Well-Known Member

    Only guessing (but pretty sure): in your original group photo, the top left is Augustus, and the bottom right is Domitian.
     
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  16. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

    does anyone have an idea who the fourth pic from top is? It really stumps me. I’ll show another pic image.jpg
     
  17. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Looks like Caracalla?
     
  18. joecoincollect

    joecoincollect Well-Known Member

    interesting. I’ll look into his coins then. Thanks!
     
  19. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    The reverse depicts the god of healing, Asclepius, standing facing, head left, leaning on serpent-entwined caduceus (medical symbol) staff. The issuing city of this Roman provincial coin was probably Marcianopolis, in Moesia. The reverse legend is typically is MAPKIANOΠOΛEITΩN, but your legend is a little different. Maybe that city is wrong, or maybe it's a Greek variant. I don't know enough about Roman provincials to tell.

    So a couple of emperors struck that reverse. Caracalla is one. Geta is another. Phillip II is one. Diadumenian is another. It looks to me like Caracalla. I haven't been able to find an exact match, but I pieced together a Marcianopolis obverse and reverse FROM TWO DIFFERENT COINS to show the style. The obverse comes from https://www.vcoins.com/en/stores/ro...arkianopolis_very_rare_vf/784882/Default.aspx

    The reverse is this coin: http://numismaclub.com/unt/181299-m...ovenanced_ae_pentassarion_with_asclepius.html

    Start researching coins from Marcianopolis featuring Asclepius/Asklepios, with particular focus on the provincial issues of Caracalla.

    Screenshot 2020-12-11 06.39.24.png
     
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  20. Justin Lee

    Justin Lee I learn by doing

    This one has the chin of Maximinus:
    Screenshot_20201211-065223_Chrome.jpg

    And this one I think looks like either Augustus or could maybe be Tiberius?
    SmartSelect_20201211-065256_Chrome.jpg
     
  21. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

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