AnYangMan presents: an eclectic and diverse top 10

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by AnYangMan, Jan 1, 2021.

?

Vote on your favourite!

  1. 10. Athenian Tetradrachm

    12 vote(s)
    31.6%
  2. 9. Lifetime Julius Caesar portrait denarius

    21 vote(s)
    55.3%
  3. 8. Sino-Kharosthi 6 zhu

    4 vote(s)
    10.5%
  4. 7. Kilwa Fals

    3 vote(s)
    7.9%
  5. 6. Silver Eiraku Tsuho

    3 vote(s)
    7.9%
  6. 5. Giulio of Adrian VI

    3 vote(s)
    7.9%
  7. 4. Siege of Vienna

    14 vote(s)
    36.8%
  8. 3. Toned Sawashfan tetradrachm

    8 vote(s)
    21.1%
  9. 2. Axumite silver unit

    14 vote(s)
    36.8%
  10. 1. Jacoba & Philip Chaise d'or

    6 vote(s)
    15.8%
Multiple votes are allowed.
  1. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    What a wonderfully eclectic list! I voted for the JC (shame about the holder!), the Kilwa fals (fascinatingly obscure; nice colours), and the Axumite silver (too cool!). Small complaint: why wasn't there an option to vote for the cabinet in the poll? :D
     
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  3. Finn235

    Finn235 Well-Known Member

    Super list! You know that #3 is my favorite ;)

    I also love the Eiraku Tsuho in silver - believe it or not, Japanese coinage was my first major project; I completed a type set of all modern types (except gold, which is preposterously expensive!) I also branched out into Tokugawa coinage a bit, but quickly hit the wall where new coins would cost several $$$-$,$$$ so I stopped. I had always dreamed of owning one of the Twelve Antique coins, but I thought that they started at a couple thousand dollars and went up from there- is that not the case?
     
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  4. Al Kowsky

    Al Kowsky Well-Known Member

    A.Y.Man, Your diverse selection of of coins shows a real love of history in general, with a strong leaning to Asian history :D. My personal favorite is #1, the Dutch Gothic gold coin. This coin can stand next to the great Gothic coinage of France & England :happy:! I remember the excellent article you wrote on coin #3, the handsome silver coin from the Kingdom of Khwarezm ;). Another important addition to your collection is clearly #6, the silver coin of Hideyoshi :cool:. Japan really secured its final identity after this tumultuous period of warfare, & Hideyoshi was one of the important players.
     
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  5. Curtisimo

    Curtisimo the Great(ish)

    @AnYangMan ,

    This might well be my favorite of all the 100+ lists that were posted this year. Every single one of these is a carefully chosen and interesting coin. My favorites;

    #9 - JC Denarius: my eyes nearly bugged out of my head when I read that the auction house lost the ticket that came with this coin. That is literally unbelievable.

    #6 - Silver Eiraku Tsuho: I think many of the readers here might not be overly familiar with just how amazing of a find this is. Ever since I visited Japan in 2019 and became captivated by its history I’ve been on the lookout for a representative coin from the period of unification and have come up empty handed. You managed to snag a beautiful (and silver!) coin from a pivotal time in history. Wonderful!

    #4 - Siege of Vienna: I love coins that can be traced to such a narrow context. Add to that the importance of the moment and that makes this a truly special coin.

    Thanks for the list. I am hoping to see you post more coins and write-ups like these in 2021!
     
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  6. svessien

    svessien Senior Member

    That is one diverse collection of favorites, well done!
    The cabinet is great too. I have a similar one that I put my clothes in, and have stacked parts of my collection of old radios on top of:) Late 19th/early 20th century?

    I voted for #4, 2, 1. I find the siege coin interesting. I have a small collection of emergency coins and currency, and a coin like that would fit in there. So thank you for a good coin tip.
     
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  7. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    @AnYangMan, you are a treasure! What a marvelously diverse and well-explained list.

    I cannot limit my favorites to just one or three. 7, 4, 3, 2, ... and I just can't not include the JC dictator in perpetuity denarius :).

    And that cabinet! :wideyed:
     
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  8. AnYangMan

    AnYangMan Well-Known Member

    Thanks all for the very kind words! Glad to see love for each of them, no matter their ‘ancientness’. It seems the portrait JC with its magnificent provenance and the siege coin of Vienna, the youngest and second oldest on the list, are appreciated most! Followed closely by the Axum after its impressive comeback! As for me, well I love them all equally ;)

    Indeed, the 12 aren’t cheap! They generally start at a couple of hundred dollars (if you are willing to sacrifice on condition), with the later ones especially being more affordable. The Engi tsuho is generally the cheapest, while the Nyoyaku Shinpo is near impossible to get. Steve Album has a complete set in his upcoming auction, but there is at least one of which I am sceptical… Anyhow, I really like the Jingo Kaiho I got, despite its cracks:

    upload_2021-1-7_23-47-2.png

    Japan, Empress Shotoku. AE Jingo Kaiho (765-782). Calligraphy by Kibi-no-Mabi.

    What are the odds! I too had my eyes on it the first time it appeared, but dropped out way before you probably. I had thought this time it would climb a little bit more towards the first hammer price, so I was a little surprised to win it for near opening! Maybe its appearance without ticket scared off bidders this time? Strange how things happen sometimes…

    Now there’s a plan! Do we leave the coins in while dipping the cabinet for a nice cleaned look? :D

    Ah don’t bring that up!!!! A dark day in my bidding history that shows how stupid, yet ultimately not disastrous, adding an additional 0 can be… I would much rather look back on the first time I broke a certain barrier with Jacoba's coin! Many sleepless nights indeed, but not a single regret.

    I had to make some difficult choices once I got to the last 14. In an earlier iteration of the list it did make it, but it was just pushed out by the Adrian VI Giulio. It eventually came down to which I considered a bigger milestone for me personally and the Giulio, particularly with its provenance and the circumstances as to how I acquired it, just won out. But it was a close match! The fat-necked Etruscan @Roerbakmix is referring to is the ex. Renfrew 10 asses I posted here earlier this year. I recently photographed it myself with the latest version of my photography setup (the only image I have actually made with this version). Quite happy, although there is always room for improvement:

    [​IMG]

    11. Etruria (Etrsucans), Populonia. AR 10 Asses (300-250 BC). Ex Vecchi and Lord Renfrew. (Full res)

    And I might as well post the other coins that almost made it onto the list (including one Chinese coin @TypeCoin971793! Can we be friends again???)

    12. Another Siege coin! Crossing off Breda, a smallish city relatively close to me, from my wishlist was something I came close to on multiple occasions, but always got outbid. I was ready to settle for a visually less impressive copper 1 or 2 stuiver. Even the lowest silver denomination, the 20 stuiver, is quite bland when compared to the 40 and 60 stuivers and apparently I am not the only one who thinks so, as they shoot up in price while they are about as rare as the 20 stuiver. Luckily a large collection of siege coins were recently auctioned at a somewhat less well-known auction house and this snook through the cracks; I got it for around half what these normally go for. The 1985 dealer-provenance is neat (bought for no less than 12.000 Belgian Francs at the time), but had it been an exceptional provenance it would have certainly made the list!

    [​IMG]

    City of Breda, AR Emergency 40 Stuiver (1625, struck during the Siege)

    The siege Breda is a rather sombre moment in Dutch history. Thrice before, during the initial phase of the eighty years’ war, Breda had been besieged, with the city eventually falling in the hands of the Dutch republic. As this war of independence raged on into the early 17th century, financial and human resources were depleted and the general populace was tired of the everlasting fighting. A temporary truce was deemed to be beneficial to both sides; the Twelve Years' Truce was signed in 1609 and would expire twelve years later in 1621. Breda, whose position as a major fortification at the edge of the Spanish Netherlands, made it a strategical and prime target for the Spanish. Preparations, under the command of the famous Ambrogio Spinola, were made almost as soon as the truce was over and in August 1624 he marched on Breda. The defences were well-prepared for a long siege; it would last until the 5th of June 1625 till their supplies ran out and the governor had to capitulate. While there were only a couple of minor skirmishes, the diseases rampaging through the city killed around a third of the population of Breda! Roughly half way through the siege, in January 1625, the city council had issued a series of siege coinage to pay the defending garrison; they ordered all citizens to turn in their silver cutlery and platters at the town hall, out of which emergency coinage would be struck (60 stuiver, 40 stuiver, 20 stuiver, later to be followed by an emission of copper ½, 1 and 2 stuiver).


    13. A new spade! Chinese purchases were far and few between. A couple of minor pieces that were certainly neat, but little standout wowie pieces. I did manage to get three new spade inscriptions; Lu , Zheng 鄭 and Zhangzi 長子. None extremely rare, but all far from common. It seems the further I get, the more difficult it is to add new inscriptions. The Lu I bought from Steve Album has to be the rarest of the bunch, albeit not to great quality-wise:

    [​IMG]

    State of Han, city of Lu. AE Square foot spade (circa 250-250 BC)


    14. I posted this Toison d’argent/Zilveren Vlies and its write-up already before. Each coin from that topic could have easily taken this spot, but eventually its fascinating iconography and pleasing appearance landed the Zilveren vlies of Philip the fair this spot. I just love the gothicesque coat of arms on the reverse, its early date, the rendering of the sheep skin and most of all the historic connection it has to the order of the Golden Fleece!

    [​IMG]

    Duchy of Brabant, Philip the Fair. AR Zilveren Vlies (1498, Antwerpen)

    For those that wanted a quick peak inside the cabinet (apologies for the quality):

    [​IMG]

    Anyhow, thanks all, here’s to an equally diverse and eclectic 2021!
     
    Last edited: Jan 7, 2021
  9. +VGO.DVCKS

    +VGO.DVCKS Well-Known Member

    Very cool, @AnYangMan, to see how you carried out your plans for the knife money!
    Your Brabantine Zilveren Vlies is Magnificent. I don't venture far into the late 15th century, but the convergence of the device of the Order of the Golden Fleece, the ornately quartered arms, and the notably early Arabic date, all converge to powerfully evoke the period, with all its ambiguity between late Gothic and early Renaissance dynamics. Brilliant.
     
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  10. Alegandron

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

    LOL, ABSOLUTELY ! Let's do it right!

    Fat-Neck COIN-BRO's!
    Mine:

    upload_2021-1-7_18-23-46.png
    Etruria Populonia 211-206 BC AR 10 As 20mm 4.21g die brk Lr Male Hd L - Blank

    LOL, is it a Die-Match? Or, did you just steal my coin? :D
     
  11. posnerfan_48

    posnerfan_48 Active Member

    Beautiful coins! Thanks for the shout-out. As Cicero said, if the gods gave all the power to one person to make the sun rise and set at their command, that person would still want a friend to share that sun set with. Thanks for making this hobby so great, and I aspire to one day have posts as great as yours.
     
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