First a quote about these coins from Hoover (footnotes and references to plates removed)... My piece belongs to Hoover Group L, featuring the laureate head of Zeus right on the obverse, and a bull charging left on the reverse with the Nabataean inscription NBT above. Hoover records only 10 known examples of the type, but there are probably a few more by now.
Now thats phat! i haven't seen one of those yet. Sooo Greek Arabia thats really neat. Great Find Kudos!
A wonderful coin, extremely rare and exceptionally preserved. Lead coins are often very rough and corroded. One question - on what grounds did you determine this is a "token?"
Coin or token is rather up to debate. I'll quote Hoover's excellent work on this coinage again, in which he makes a compelling argument to consider them something akin to tesserae...
I didn't expect this one to win any beauty contests, but the coin is actually in pretty good shape for its age and alloy. A lot of 35 of these was sold back in 2003, CNG 64, lot 476, and one or two trickle into the market every year. Here's a sample of the CNG lot... Mostly they've been discovered in Jordanian archeological digs, in conditions that protected them from the elements. Any that might have been buried would have disintegrated long ago.
I found a seller who has a bunch (~15) of Nabatean Lead Pieces in Stock I've got 1 I'm looking at... any more information on the ones will a bull right, Laureate bust of King?
WC, here is Hoover's paper on the Nabataean lead coinage at the Royal Numismatic Society's site. It's a free, legal download... http://www.royalnumismaticsociety.org/NC_Offprints/NC166/NC166_09_Hoover.pdf
John, if you're interested in Hellenistic lead coinages, I have a few articles for you. I'll send you the info when I can get access and my bibliography again. And if you read closely, the only reason these and other leaden issues are called tokens are because of a baseless assumption that the Greeks and Roman s didn't issue lead coinages. Don't hop aboard the circular reasoning merry go round.
Can you send it to me too? I love any reading, no matter what topic of the Ancient (specifically pre-500... I'm interested in some things after but most parts I am not)
Thanks Bill. I'm not so well-read on the matter that I have an opinion one way or another. I'd be very interested in reading those articles.