Budget Antinuos

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by medoraman, Jul 10, 2016.

  1. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I have tried to buy these a few times before, and always get Clio'ed. This one was cheap on Ebay so figure why not:

    s-l1600.jpg

    Not the greatest, but got it for like $40. It will fill a space until I get a better one. Its a lead tesserae from Antinoopolis.
     
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  3. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    I don't collect these, but having this one would more than satisfy that little itch. Congrats.
     
  4. Okidoki

    Okidoki Well-Known Member

    very nice winner :D
     
  5. GregH

    GregH Well-Known Member

    Yep Antinous is on my shopping list top 5! His tesserae are more affordable than his drachma and large medallions. $40 is a very reasonable price for yours. On vcoins, the same item would be offered for a few hundred dollars.

    I'm trying to find a nice style Antinous medallion or drachm. They're not cheap, and usually have problems in my price range (tooling, smoothing, filled corrosion pits).
     
  6. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

  7. Pishpash

    Pishpash Well-Known Member

  8. GregH

    GregH Well-Known Member

    Nice one @Pishpash ... Now does anybody know what these tesserae were used for? Were they really theatre tickets or are there other theories?
     
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  9. Jwt708

    Jwt708 Well-Known Member

    TIF and Pishpash like this.
  10. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    I only have one Tessera...

    RI PB Tessera c 1st C CE Fortuna rudder cornu DP O-R Rostovtsev 2307 Ruggerio 808-9 13mm 1-39g.JPG
    Rome.
    Lead Tessera c. 1st cent. AD
    13mm, 1.39 g, 12h
    Obv: Fortuna standing left, resting rudder on ground with right hand, holding cornucopia in left
    Rev: Large DP
    Ref: Rostovtsev 2307; Ruggerio 808-9
    Ex: Tom Vossen collection of Roman lead objects.
    Ex: Gert Boersema
     
  11. Mikey Zee

    Mikey Zee Delenda Est Carthago

    Congrats all!!!

    All are wonderful examples at affordable prices and it seems my ultimate choice when i try to fill that specific 'album hole' myself-----'coins' of Antinous are just way too pricey for me.
     
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  12. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Thats great, Chris.
     
  13. Ken Dorney

    Ken Dorney Yea, I'm Cool That Way...

    Its been discussed many times before, but the bottom line is that nobody knows and nobody will unless there is some written document discovered explaining them (highly unlikely). The best guess is that they are a local token, used for very specific purposes.
     
  14. Ardatirion

    Ardatirion Où est mon poisson

    I hate Antinous - everyone suddenly has an interest in tesserae because they want an Antinous. I used to pay less than $10 for this type. Get off my lawn, ya darn kids!

    To clarify a few points for the would-be tesserae collector. These are not Alexandrian at all. They were produced in the city of Antinoöpolis, likely sometime after the death of Antinous, late 2nd-mid 3rd century, and are completely unrelated to the other Antinous coins.

    I think about half of my posts are explanations of what tesserae are. I should just make it my signature line. Here's some previous discussions:
    https://www.cointalk.com/threads/ac...ag-–-an-exceptional-mythological-type.276783/
    https://www.cointalk.com/threads/a-relic-from-the-ancient-theater.239377/
    https://www.cointalk.com/threads/the-other-cities-of-roman-egypt.224384/#post-1669685
     
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