If you could have any Ancient coin what would you pick?

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Gam3rBlake, Jul 8, 2021.

  1. Cherd

    Cherd Junior Member

    Assuming that the people actually existed, and the story happened as told in the Gospels, I would choose to own one of the coins that Judas was paid to betray Jesus (the best condition one of the bunch of course!)

    I can't say that I'm crazy about the impact that religion has on people and the world in general. However, considering the role that Christianity has played in shaping Western Culture over the last 2000 years, it would be hard to come up with a coin that had more historical significance. If Judas wouldn't have taken that money, who knows what the world would be today!
     
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  3. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    That’s definitely on my list as well.

    Although I’ll probably never own one. :(

    But I’m definitely going to pick up a Julius Caesar denarius one day.
     
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  4. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    According to historians it would most likely be an Antiochan tetradrachm with Tiberius on the obverse and Augustus on the reverse.

    Although I think a lot of the stories in the Bible are intended to be metaphors.

    It’s interesting how often coins are mentioned in the Bible.

    Like when some people try to trick Jesus by asking if his followers should pay taxes or not:

    “Jesus first called them hypocrites, and then asked one of them to produce a Roman coin that would be suitable for paying Caesar's tax. One of them showed him a Roman coin, and he asked them whose head and inscription were on it. They answered, "Caesar's," and he responded: "Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's".”
     
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  5. David Atherton

    David Atherton Flavian Fanatic

    V689.JPG

    Fantasising a bit here, I would love to have an example of this unique Vespasian denarius in the BM. I've been aware of its existence since childhood (it was illustrated in my Penguin edition of Suetonius given to me on my 13th birthday).
     
  6. Cherd

    Cherd Junior Member

    Ya, another instance, the "Mark of the Beast" in Revelations is making reference to the image of Nero on coins. The numeric equivalents of the Hebrew letters used to spell "Nero Caesar" add up to 666.

    Come to think about it, I still need one of the Beasts coins for my collection! :inpain:
     
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  7. Di Nomos

    Di Nomos Well-Known Member

    I would pick an Athenian Dekadrachm. In particular the Kunstfreund/Bunker Hunt coin. It's the coin that got me excited about ancient Greek coins when I was a kid.

    Though I would settle for a Clazomenae Tetradrachm signed by Theodotos. Like the one in the British Museum.....I'm not fussy.
     
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  8. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

  9. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

  10. AussieCollector

    AussieCollector Moderator Moderator

    Yea, me either.

    Unless I win the lottery, or find a new talent I never knew I had that makes LOTS of money.
     
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  11. CoinJockey73

    CoinJockey73 Well-Known Member

    Can it be 30 pieces of silver? ;)
     
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  12. Finn235

    Finn235 Well-Known Member

    If literally *any* coin, it would be a toss up:

    1) The Eucratides 20-stater would look mighty fine on my desk
    Monnaie_de_Bactriane,_Eucratide_I,_2_faces.jpg

    2) Of course the Eid Mar aureus; previously it was speculated that the gold versions of the type may have been minted as presentation pieces to the actual assassins of Caesar
    roman_brutus_aureus_recond_4m-1536x772.jpg

    3) Or since I've been on a sestertius kick lately, how about the Hadrian sestertius believed to have been personally commissioned by Hadrian himself from Antoninianus of Aphrodisias
    10-2.jpg
     
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  13. akeady

    akeady Well-Known Member

    I'd settle for a tetradrachm of Katane with the facing head of Apollo by Herakleidas.
    The Kimon tetradrachm of Syracuse used to be my favourite until I actually saw both in the flesh and this was superior.

    Picture stolen from Kunker of this wonderful specimen, later sold by CNG:

    Herakleidas.jpg

    Interestingly, this went for €200K + fees in 2015 and for $225K + fees in 2019, so I may be able to trade my entire collection for it next time :D

    ATB,
    Aidan.
     
  14. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    The 20 stater piece of Eukratides. That Alexander piece also is nice at 700,000 Swiss francs.
     
  15. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

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  16. Shea19

    Shea19 Well-Known Member

    I would definitely go with a Titus/Colosseum sestertius…this beauty sold a few years ago for around $460k.

    585C3F17-A277-48E4-8298-4D2AF38CFDD6.jpeg
     
  17. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

  18. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    I’m actually surprised the Romans didn’t put the Colliseum on more of their coinage.

    It would’ve looked beautiful on a gold aureus.
     
  19. AncientJoe

    AncientJoe Well-Known Member

    You're in luck: it does. This is the coin I'd choose (one of two known), although it's impounded in a collection where it's very unlikely to ever see the light of day again:

    image00126.jpg
     
  20. Cherd

    Cherd Junior Member

    Every time I look at one of those Colosseum coins, it reminds me that the Science of Perspective wasn't developed until the Renaissance o_O
     
  21. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    Well in all fairness the Renaissance was simply the re-discovery of Ancient Greek & Roman texts and ideas that had been lost in the Middle Ages when people were mostly focused on religious texts.

    In fact The poet Beccadeli sold a country home for funding to purchase one manuscript of Livy’s “Ab Urbe Condita Libra” copied by Poggio.

    “The intellectual basis of the Renaissance was its version of humanism, derived from the concept of Roman humanitas and the rediscovery of classical Greek philosophy, such as that of Protagoras, who said that "man is the measure of all things". This new thinking became manifest in art, architecture, politics, science and literature. Early examples were the development of perspective in oil painting and the revived knowledge of how to make concrete. ”
     
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