Empress Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 228AD Rome Mint

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by panzerman, Apr 12, 2016.

  1. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    obv. bust of Empress
    rev. Felicitas with Caduceus
    2.84g 20mm 17241_0.jpg
     
    Publius, Jwt708, dlhill132 and 21 others like this.
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  3. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Very well detailed. I like it!
     
    panzerman likes this.
  4. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Great coin.

    I went through many till I was happy with the one below.

    [​IMG]
    Julia Mamaea (222 - 235 A.D.)
    AR Denarius
    O: IVLIA MAMAEA AVG, Diademed and draped bust right.
    R:VENVS GENETRIX, Venus standing left, head left, holding scepter and apple; at feet to left, Cupid standing right with hands raised.
    Rome
    3.6g
    20mm
    RIC 355 (Severus Alexander), RSC 072
     
  5. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    My thanks to all of you, for getting me into this new area of Roman coinage.
     
    dlhill132 and Mikey Zee like this.
  6. rrdenarius

    rrdenarius non omnibus dormio

  7. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    hey....you know that isn't gold...right? ;)

    still great! the details are dang near perfect!
     
    panzerman likes this.
  8. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

    Well folks, after some of us have been clio'ed so many times at auctions, from now on we all have to prepare ourselves to be panzerman'ed in our respective fields of collecting, that's unfair !

    Fantastic coin John, congrats
    Q
     
    Paul M., Mikey Zee, Bing and 2 others like this.
  9. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Sweet OP-silver, panzerman ......

    => sadly, all I have is a bronze of this cool chick

    EGYPT, Alexandria. Julia Mamaea. Augusta
    BI Tetradrachm

    222-235 AD
    Dated RY 11 of Severus Alexander (AD 231/2)
    Diameter: 23 mm
    Weight: 12.92 grams
    Obverse: Diademed and draped bust of Julia Mamaea right
    Reverse: Draped bust of Serapis right, wearing calathus; L A (date) behind, palm before
    Reference: Köln 2526; Dattari (Savio) 4511; K&G 64.74; Emmett 3224


    Julia Mamaea.jpg


    :rolleyes:
     
  10. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Thanks, I will be nice! Well, real reason is I am flat broke now, and still unemployed:(
    I have to pay for my Sassanian Dinar/ Roma auctions:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(
    Hopefully, be back to work this week.
    But to be serious for a moment, I really like these AR Denarius coins(you can get 100 for cost of ONE AV Aureus! How great is that!:happy:
    John
     
    Mikey Zee likes this.
  11. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

    Nice! I have one just like it.


    ..................



    11857552_1008941242473259_824544135_n.jpg






    :D
     
  12. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

    Mamaea is quite an "easy" empress to collect : not too many types that you couldn't consider putting them together in a lifetime, good quality in style and metals, with nice portraits and reverses, and affordable prices even in high grade so far.

    [​IMG]
    Julia Mamea, denarius struck in Rome in AD 228
    IVLIA MAMEA AVG, Draped and diademed bust of Mamea right
    FELICITAS PUBLICA, Felicity standing left, holding a caduceus and leaning on a column
    3.39 gr
    Ref : Cohen #17, RCV #8209


    [​IMG]
    Julia Mamaea, Sestertius Rome mint, AD 224
    IVLIA MAMA EA AVGVSTA, Draped and diademed bust right
    VENERI FELICI, Venus standing right, holding Cupid and a sceptre. SC in field
    17.85 gr
    Ref : RIC # 694, RCV # 8232, Cohen # 62

    Q
     
  13. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    This is an example of the only type of Mamaea using a portrait without a diadem. Juno Conservatrix is shown with a peacock. Mine is unusual in being an obverse die clash. I suspect that the reverse die that caused this damage was destroyed by the clash. The one here shows no damage. rx0365fd0892.jpg
     
  14. Mikey Zee

    Mikey Zee Delenda Est Carthago

    Congrats @panzerman !! That's a wonderfully struck and fully detailed example.

    Great posts all!!

    I'll throw in another sestertius (LOVE the big bronzes LOL):

    Julia mamaea sestertius.JPG
     
  15. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Thanks for all the neat Julia Mamaea photos/posts! I am back at work today, a bit sore....long time since I carried a Stihl 6000 Backpak Leaf Blower on my back for 10 hours straight.
    John
     
  16. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    "Work" is good for you. Glad I'm retired.
     
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  17. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Bing....I agree 100 percent. It is not only good for being productive in society, also very healthy. The old saying, "use em or loose em" well physical work builds muscle cells, the coin hobby brain cells....
     
  18. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    I think I've lost a lot of both.
     
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  19. Jwt708

    Jwt708 Well-Known Member

    What have we done!
     
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  20. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    MONSTER! We've created a monster!
     
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  21. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Hey, hey, hey ... calm down everybody ... he's only collecting Imperials at the moment (give him some room)

    ;)
     
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