Not much, but a fairly nice RR. It turns interesting when discussing the obverse portrait. The moneyer is Quintus Titius. The obverse depicts a bearded man, wearing a winged diadem. The identification of the man and his significance for this moneyer are unknown. However, there is a school of thought that the portrait depicts a bearded Mutunus Tutunus. Mutunus Tutunus was a phallic marriage deity. During preliminary marriage rites, Roman brides are supposed to have straddled the phallus of Mutunus to prepare themselves for intercourse. The winged diadem is a reference to the Priapus of Lampsacus and to the winged phallus, a common motif in Roman decorative arts. Q TITIUS ROMAN REPUBLIC; GENS TITIA AR Denarius OBVERSE: Head of Mutinus Titinus (Priapus) right, wearing winged diadem REVERSE: Pegasus springing right, Q TITI on base Struck at Rome 90 BC 3.8g, 18mm Cr341/1, Syd 691; Titia 1 As always, your comments are welcome, and please post any coins you feel even remotely related.
What a cool denarius!!! Priapus and Pegasus---WINNER!!! I still have two RR types pending on bid...unfortunately not of either 'device', but distantly related LOl So, I guess I'll post my current deity and 'animal' example--- Vejovis and Goat (with Cupid trying to steal the scene):
cool new coin bing! i always like a pegasus, but that gnarled, bearded fellow is very interesting...whoever he is.
I agree with Chris. You can find plenty of Pegasos on many types, but the bust is really distinctive and interesting.
Wow, that's an awesome second coin, big bro (super cool) => great coin ... thanks for the cool history lesson! (I'm thinkin' of getting a Priapus painting for the dining room ... just as a conversation piece)
This tiny silver coin has Pegasus heading right, on reverse. It was likely struck in Arkanania. After posting it in a former thread, the coin remained an unsolved puzzle since it might also be linked with Corinthia. The obverse shows some sort of incused face, similar to Medusa. Hope someone could clear this up.
I'm not much help on these types of questions, though I actually perform searches. I'm sorry, but with these photos I don't know what to search. Nothing even looks incused to me.
John Anthony pointed you in the right direction when you posted this in 2014. Since you're still searching though, here's your coin's attribution. Note that your coin is bronze, not silver. The harsh cleaning it has undergone left it somewhat shiny and may have led you to believe it is toned silver. SELEUKID KINGS of SYRIA, Alexander I Balas AE, Antioch on the Orontes mint Obv: Aegis with gorgoneion Rev: Pegasos leaping right; monogram below There are some examples in CNG's archives. Here are a couple, both the same size as your coin (12mm):