Help with odd Provincial

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Brian Bucklan, Jul 9, 2016.

  1. Brian Bucklan

    Brian Bucklan Well-Known Member

    I am tired of looking at this coin and thought someone could help me out. I bought it because of the counterstamp (which I haven't quite found yet) but the base coin eludes me. It appears to be an early provincial with the reverse of four horses guided by a central figure over ???

    Hopefully someone can give me some quick help before I lose the small amount of mind I have left.

    Unknown Provincial.jpg
     
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  3. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Nice countermark!

    Looks like mine:

    [​IMG]
    Augustus, with Gaius Caesar, ( 27 B.C - 14 A.D.)
    Phrygia, Apamea.
    Gaius Masonius Rufus, Magistrate
    Ӕ20
    O: ΣΕΒΑΣΤΟΣ, laureate head right.
    R: ΓΑΙΟΣ ΚΑΙΣΑΡ ΓΑΙΟΣ ΜΑΣΩΝΙΟΣ ΡΟΥΦΟΣ ΑΠAΜΕΩΝ, Gaius Caesar in facing quadriga.
    20mm
    4.46g
    RPC 3129
     
  4. Brian Bucklan

    Brian Bucklan Well-Known Member

    Thanks Mat! I knew I've seen it somewhere. Much appreciated. And yeah, I just liked that odd countermark. Need to find that now.
     
  5. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Wish I could help, never seen that mark before. Maybe @dougsmit can help?
     
  6. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Zorro?

    Actually, I like the OP coin very much even though it is worn.
     
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  7. Cyrrhus

    Cyrrhus Well-Known Member

    The most funny is, that this was my coin..before it went to auction...
     
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  8. Brian Bucklan

    Brian Bucklan Well-Known Member

    When you do this long enough you'll find coins you once owned showing up at all sorts of different venues. This one was in a job lot at the Orlando coin show this weekend.
     
  9. Ardatirion

    Ardatirion Où est mon poisson

    I think this mark is the one recorded by Howgego as no. 679, where he reads a plain N. There's a little doohickey (technical numismatic term) on yours, so it should be a monogram. He knows it only on two coins of Apameia, one of Augustus and one of Tiberius. It was probably applied at that city.
     
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  10. Brian Bucklan

    Brian Bucklan Well-Known Member

    Thanks to all. That closes the description for the coin. And as an engineer I had to take a core course in doohickey analysis, so I do understand.
     
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