Understood. All time is relative. We have a common interest in Ancient coins...and we discuss coins from several hundred to a couple thousand years old...
I've been into the fantasy stuff since I was a kid. Not that I truly believe in it, but I was reading sic-fi books at a very early age. And even before that I really liked mythology, even read the Odyssey even though it wasn't required by school. Maybe thats why I'm into ancient coins, especially Greek coins with mythical creatures on them.
I currently have "374" non-modern coins ... => spread-out amazingly evenly throughout the first 10 coin-centuries: 600-501 BC = 5 500-401 BC = 34 400-301 BC = 54 300-201 BC = 27 200-101 BC = 45 100-1 BC = 39 0-99 AD = 23 100-199 AD = 33 200-299 AD = 56 300-399 AD = 30 ----------------------- things thin-out a bit after this (only "28" coins) 400-499 AD = 3 500-599 AD = 4 600-699 AD = 3 700-799 AD = 1 800-899 AD = 1 900-999 AD = 1 1000-1099 AD = 2 1100-1199 AD = 3 1200-1299 AD = 3 1300-1399 AD = 2 1400-1499 AD = 1 1500-1599 AD = 2 1600-1699 AD = 1 1700-1799 AD = 1 ----------------------- 1800-2016 AD => thousands of "Moderns" Oh, and my average $/ancient-coin is $221 => $82,564 for my non-modern colection alone (apparently I could have had a sweet loaded muscle car, or my cool ancient coin collection) ...... hmmm, they're both cool hobbies, eh? Maybe a late-life-crisis will change this? (vrooom-vrooom) ... hopefully not Sadly, I'm pretty sure that my entire ancient coin collection is worth less than one of the high-flier's awesome coins, eh?
600-500 BC = 9 500-400 BC = 41 400-300 BC = 59 300-200 BC = 62 200-100 BC = 80 100-1 BC = 110 1-100 AD = 180 100-200 AD = 193 200-300 AD = 443 300-400 AD = 285 400-500 AD = 3 500-600 AD = 3 The last time I did this was over two years ago... it took much longer this time around. It was a worthwhile exercise, though, and told me something about how my collection has been growing. In short, too large. Apart from that, my BC collection has grown a great deal since I've gotten more interested in Greek and RR coins. I still don't collect LRBs, though... yeah, I'll be sticking to that story .
Fascinating, what a thread! Naturally, I was flabbergasted by the gold coins of Panzerman. I love gold, too, but my attention is easily distracted to nice silver and bronze, and dozens of dear little coins, when I should have bought ONE Really Good one. Not only I forgot my Parthian Bronzes, I also forgot the sorting box with recent acquisitions that should be measured, weighed and described before I put them in my coin trays: 88 coins yet to add, among these 28 Nabataeans bought in one lot. Have to add it all up, will show in fifteen minutes.
600-500 BC = 1 coin (1 AV) 500-400 BC = 7 coins 400-300 BC = 5 coins 300-200 BC = 13 coins 200-100 BC = 18 coins 100-0 BC = 22 coins 0 BC-100 AD = 90 coins 100-200 AD = 42 coins 200-300 AD = 75 coins 300-400 AD = 65 coins (1 AV) 400-500 AD = 48 coins 500-600 AD = 24 coins 600-700 AD = 90 coins (3 AV) 700-800 AD = 32 coins 800-900 AD = 7 coins (1 AV) 900-1000 AD = 18 coins (2 AV) 1000-1100 AD = 22 coins 1100-1200 AD = 57 coins (2 AV) 1200-1300 AD = 31 coins 1300-1400 AD = 1 coin 1400-1500 AD = 1 coin 1500-1600 AD = 4 coins 1600-1700 AD = 7 coins 1700-1800 AD = 3 coins Total 665 Not counting the (about 50) coins in my swap tray, because mentally I already removed them from my collection. The gold coins are a minuscule Phocaean, a majestic Kidarite Hun, 3 Byzantines, 2 Norman Sicilians and some Arabic coins.
I really enjoy sci-fi, but more from the plausible science approach. I enjoy an author who takes a scientific theory and extrapolates it into a realistic future. Fantasy does not interest me as much. Marsic Confederation... Oath Scene... 90BCE
Wow, Steve, I knew you had several Moderns, but did not realize "thousands". Are these mainly Canadian Issues, or do you get into other areas?
Z-Bro => I just checked that link to my sweet ol' thread and in March-2014 you only had 225 coins ..... you've been burnin' like a comet these past two years!! (you now have way more than 1000 coins ... well played, my friend!!)
Funny, eh? ... all this talk about sweet gold and silver coins => my favourites by far, are the sweet AE babies with the wonderfully coloured patinas!! (maybe I just like cheering for the underdogs?)
sorry Gandalf, I didn't see your response until just now ... => all Canadian (well, I have a hundred wonderful "International Coins" from my Granny's collection (RIP, she rocked)) ... but my early coin-days were all about "Dominion of Canada" (paper notes and quarters)
Way cool! And, hey, I am a big fan of AE too... Check out my AES recent posts... Patinas and colors make them!
Sorry I'm late for this party....but I find it interesting that most of us have that 'unfocused' love of coins stretching all periods and types. Since I received my full retirement benefits this past January, I've been on a bit a of a buying binge (just won three more with two pending) and haven't inventoried them since Steve's thread but I believe they are about: 1/3 Greek to late Roman Republic; 1/3 Imperial to just before Diocletian; and about 1/3 from the Tetrarchy to a few Byzantine.....about an even split between 'bronze' and silver with two gold coins. BTW: one of my recent wins at Roma was a Diocletian argenteus with the tetrarchy reverse I was missing until that auction. Great posts guys!!!
Man, if we include moderns then I probably have about a thousand from 19th-21st centuries. Mostly American and British decimal. In terms of the books, I enjoy both Sci-Finand fantasy for the same reasons, and that is exploring humanity under different circumstances - examples being Robert Heinlein, and Terry Pratchett (currently reading Mort by Pratchett - I just love his view of the world).
I am old fashioned I prefer BC and AD to BCE and CE, before I give a count, can I assume that prior to 400 AD is ancient and after 400 AD is medieval? Here's my favorite: Attica Athens AR Tetradrachm 440 to 404 BC One of the local coin dealers has one of those expensive machines that tell you what a coin is made of, it registered at 89% silver, is approximately 2 1/2 cm at its longest, and weighs 14.4 grams, all three are within what a real one should be. The dealer thought it was genuine, but I guess at some point I'll send it to NGC Ancients for certification.