Help with Roman coin ID

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by JulianthePhilosopher, Apr 12, 2021.

  1. Got this in a lot of Roman Bronze from CNG and it look a lot different than the other. Any ideas? 18.30 mm and 1.98 grams. Thanks!
    F27EFE6B-B83E-43F0-A415-9BEAE0FB3FC1.jpeg A2A66B56-0376-4C69-86E6-A4237187EADE.jpeg F79D1AAF-FA91-4B29-84A2-89FD43AF9521.jpeg 248A54A5-DCF2-456B-9F74-73CA00E95CA0.jpeg
     
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  3. JayAg47

    JayAg47 Well-Known Member

    My guess is Severus Alexander.
     
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  4. Herodotus

    Herodotus Well-Known Member

    Severus Alexander w/ the emperor on the reverse, sacrificing with a patera over a lighted altar; perhaps?

    EDIT: Heh, you beat me by a couple of seconds @JayAg47 .

    If I'm reading the legends correct, it looks to be something akin to:

    Obverse: IMP C M AVR SEV ALEXAND AVG

    Reverse: P M TR P V COS II PP
     
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2021
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  5. Is this coin an antoninianus? It look more like a silver than a bronze coin. Which is weird since it came in a lot of imperial bronze coins.
     
  6. Herodotus

    Herodotus Well-Known Member

    The bust would be radiate (rather than laureate) if it were an Antoninianus.

    To me, it looks like the extremely corroded core of a (contemporary?)fouree, or a modern cast fake. I can't tell with the photo.

    At 1.98g, the weight is pretty low for an AR denarius, however, environmental damage or harsh cleaning could've played a part in that.
     
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  7. Inspector43

    Inspector43 More than 75 Years Active Collecting Supporter

    Some bronze coins were washed or platted with silver. Here is an example that shows the silver that has partially come off.
    Probus with silver.jpg
     
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  8. Harry G

    Harry G Well-Known Member

    Severus Alexander never actually minted antoniniani for himself; the only antoninianus coins of him were minted many years later by Trajan Decius.

    Imo, this is a denarius that is probably official, but badly corroded
     
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  9. Marsyas Mike

    Marsyas Mike Well-Known Member

    Every once in a while I get a Severus Alexander denarius in a lot that looks like the OP. I am not sure if they are fourree cores or just low silver content badly preserved/leached/corroded. Not pretty, but identifiable.

    Here's one:

    Severus Alex. - Den. Providentia RIC 174 July 2020 (0).jpg

    Severus Alexander Denarius
    (222-228 A.D.)
    Rome Mint

    IMP C M AVR SEV ALEXAND AVG, laureate, draped & cuirass. bust r. / PROVIDENTIA AVG, Providentia, draped, standing left, pointing at globe with wand in right hand, spear in left hand.
    RIC 174 (draped & cuirassed).
     
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  10. Inspector43

    Inspector43 More than 75 Years Active Collecting Supporter

    Correct me if I am wrong, but I think this is a Severus Alexander like yours that has been silver plated.
    upload_2021-4-12_8-14-20.png
     
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2021
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  11. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    Could be a limes denarius, made of very light weight billon.
     
  12. romismatist

    romismatist Well-Known Member

    I would agree with @Harry G... looks like an official but badly corroded denarius of Severus Alexander...
     
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