Roman Egypt Tetradrachm of Antoninus Pius (AD 138-161)

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by willieboyd2, Jan 17, 2010.

  1. willieboyd2

    willieboyd2 First Class Poster

    Roman Egypt Tetradrachm of Antoninus Pius (AD 138-161)

    I bought this one recently from Forum Coins:

    [​IMG]

    Antoninus Pius Provincial Roman Egypt Billon Tetradrachm

    Obverse: Draped and cuirassed bust right with aegis
    AUT K T AIL ADR ANTWNINOCEUC
    Reverse: Dikaiosyne seated left, scales in right, cornucopia in right
    L TRI-TOU

    Catalog: Milne 1619 var

    Dikaiosyne is the Greek personification of justice.
    She holds scales and a cornucopia.

    :)
     
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  3. stainless

    stainless ANTONINIVS

    ooo, that is a real nice Alexandrian Provincal!


    stainless
     
  4. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

  5. Bart9349

    Bart9349 Junior Member

  6. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

    I like the style of the reverse most...

    Q
     
  7. Drusus

    Drusus Pecunia non olet

    Its striking and in great condition...good choice!
     
  8. Harfoush

    Harfoush Junior Member

    Hey,

    Excuse me for asking but how did you know it is a roman Egyptian coin??

    Cheers,
     
  9. stainless

    stainless ANTONINIVS

    Just look at it, you can just tell, Bajeezy! :rolleyes:

    :D lol, but naw, the style. That, and a reference.


    stainless
     
  10. Harfoush

    Harfoush Junior Member

    mmmmmmm !!!!! alright just wanted to learn a few things :bow:..
    thanks for replying ....

    Cheers,
     
  11. mpcusa

    mpcusa "Official C.T. TROLL SWEEPER"


    Know thats a cool coin:thumb:
     
  12. JimboJim

    JimboJim Junior Member

    beautiful coin
     
  13. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    I fear a previous reply was a bit harsh.

    Roman Egypt coins are very different from other Provincial issues. The economy was closed since Egypt was more or less the private property of the Emperor. Money from outside did not circulate in Eqypt and Egyptian money did not circulate elsewhere. As a result they never bothered to write the place of issue on the coins. Most coins have no legend on the reverse except for a date using the regnal year of the current emperor following the symbol (L) for 'year'. Sometimes they used Greek numerals and sometimes (as on this example) they used the word written out (TPITOU = third).

    Common denominations were billon (poor silver alloy) tetradrachms and large bronze drachms. There were some fractional bronzes especially in the early Empire. The obverse legends were in Greek and surrounded a portrait of the emperor. Reverses varied a lot but often showed local Egyptian gods.

    Bronze drachms often show an unusual flan shape from the blanks being cast in cup shaped depressions in a stone causing the obverse surface to be smaller than the reverse. This is Antoninus Pius with a snake-god Agathodaemon.
    [​IMG]

    As time passed the amount of silver in the tetradrachms got so low that they look like copper. In the late period, tetradrachms often show a distinct pebbled surface to the edge from the techniques used to produce the flans. This Probus shows the typical look of that period for Alexandria.

    [​IMG]

    Alexandrian coins of whatever period used different minting techniques than most cities making their coins distinctive looking. As a result the answer "you can just tell" really was not as flippant as it may have sounded.
     
  14. Harfoush

    Harfoush Junior Member

    Thanks alot for this precious information... thanks again...

    Cheers,
     
  15. Bart9349

    Bart9349 Junior Member

    Doug: Nice informative post. Thanks. :thumb:

    guy
     
  16. De Orc

    De Orc Well-Known Member

    willieboyd2 a Great looking coin and Doug great explanation about Roman coins issued in Egypt
     
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