Need help identifying English Gold Stater

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by alphaphil, Jun 8, 2015.

  1. alphaphil

    alphaphil New Member

    1stater 006.JPG 1stater 005.JPG
    Hello. I hope this is in the right section. I need help identifying this coin which i believe is a full stater early England. Weighs 5-83 grammes.Any help greatly appreciated.
     

    Attached Files:

    stevex6, Orfew and Ancientnoob like this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Pishpash

    Pishpash Well-Known Member

    Not my area, have you looked on Wildwinds?
     
  4. Pishpash

    Pishpash Well-Known Member

    This is similar to yours
    http://www.acsearch.info/image.html?id=280011

    Description
    CELTIC COINAGE
    Britain
    No.: 1
    Schätzwert/Estimation: CHF 600.-
    Catuvellauni. Gold stater 40/20. Remains of laureate bust as cruciform ornament. Rev. Horse galloping to r., shield below. 5,77 g. Mack 135. DT 9498. Blanchet p. 480. Good very fine-almost extremely fine.
     
    stevex6 and TIF like this.
  5. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Pish answered while I was typing. I was going to suggest the Ambiani tribe but she seems to have nailed it with Catuvellauni.

    Here's another similar Catuvellauni coin, from CNG's archives:
    [​IMG]
    Compare to yours:
    CelticAV-CTuser.jpg
     
    stevex6, Ancientnoob and Pishpash like this.
  6. afantiques

    afantiques Well-Known Member

    I wonder how many wives or sheep that would buy you back in the Dark Ages?
     
    Ancientnoob and Steve Knight like this.
  7. alphaphil

    alphaphil New Member

    Thanks for your help. Not my usual area.
     
  8. kevin McGonigal

    kevin McGonigal Well-Known Member

    That coin may be electrum rather than pure or high gold alloy.
     
    Ancientnoob likes this.
  9. Ancientnoob

    Ancientnoob Money Changer

    Figure how much distilled water the coin displaces and get volume of the coin.
    Do some math and find the density. Then find out how much that density deviates from the density of pure gold. There is some margin for error but It will give you a good idea of the percentage.

    I did something similar here.

    https://www.cointalk.com/threads/my-new-almost-ancient-sort-of-gold-coin.263750/
     
    Steve Knight likes this.
  10. Ancientnoob

    Ancientnoob Money Changer

    This might also help a little...


    350px-Ag-Au-Cu-colours-english.svg.png
     
  11. Steve Knight

    Steve Knight New Member

    They really were not so dark. They had lots of history written. See 1995 book:
    After the Flood by an English fellow named Bill Cooper. I found his perhaps controversial common sense really down-to-earth. They even had a history that was written at the same time as Julius Caesar's. And one way way way before...
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page