Went downtown to pick up my latest addition

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by cmezner, Aug 4, 2023.

  1. cmezner

    cmezner do ut des Supporter

    Since I didn't have a Drusus and he was one of the ablest Roman commanders, I couldn't resist in getting this one:cool::

    AE Sestertius, Uncertain Thracian mint 50(?) - 54 AD
    37 mm, 26.65 g, 6h
    BMC 208, BNat II (Paris) Nr. 198-203 (42-43 AD); RIC 2nd edition 109; Cohen I, 8
    Ex Curtis L. Clay Collection; ex CNG E322, 12 March 2014, E Auction 507

    The same RIC number, covers Rome and at least three major provincial mints without P P, and Rome, the Spanish mint, and the Thracian mint with P P in the legend on the reverse.

    Ob.: NERO CLAVDIVS DRVSVS GERMANICVS IMP Bare head of Drusus to l.
    Rev.: TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG PM•TRP•IMP•PP•S•C• upside down in exergue. Claudius togate seated to l. on curule chair resting on globe, against which leans a parazonium (sword), and holding a laurel branch in r. hand. The emperor places his foot on cuirass, and scattered at his feet and under chair is military equipment: shields, spears and a helmet.
    Picture courtesy HJB:

    upload_2023-8-4_20-28-7.png

    and then I rummaged through the pick-bin (that was so fun) at HJB and got 6 coins to attribute. Don't know if I'll be able to attribute all 6. This is the only one, (a byzantine nummis - I don't have many byzantine coins:D) I have attributed:

    Anastasius I Dicorus
    AE Nummis, Constantinople, 512 – 517 AD
    33 x 34 mm, 15.51 g
    Sear 20; DOC 23C or DOC 20B

    Ob.: DN ANASTASIVS PP AVG Diademed, draped, and cuirassed bust to r.
    Rev.: Large M (Greek numeral for 40), dot over star at left, cross above, dot over star at right, letter B below. Mintmark CON

    upload_2023-8-4_20-32-43.png upload_2023-8-4_20-32-53.png

    Please share your Drusus, Anastasius I or anything you deem relevant
     
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  3. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Fantastic Drusus!

    [​IMG]
    Tiberius & Drusus ( 14 - 37 A.D.)
    AR Drachm
    CAPPADOCIA, Caesarea-Eusebia
    O: [TI C]AES AVG PM TRP XXXV, Laureate head of Tiberius right.
    R: DRVSVS CAES TI] AVG F COS II R P, Head of Drusus left.
    Caesarea in Cappadocia mint 33- 34 A.D.
    3.47g
    19mm
    RIC I 87; RPC I 3622. Syd 46
     
  4. The Meat man

    The Meat man Well-Known Member

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  5. Curtisimo

    Curtisimo the Great(ish)

    Nice one! Congrats.
     
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  6. Ancient Aussie

    Ancient Aussie Well-Known Member

    WOW fantastic coin, with an exceptionally nice portrait, great pick up.
     
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  7. Eduard

    Eduard Supporter**

    That is quite an attractive sestertius of DRVSUS - nice surfaces and well detailed portrait. Congratulations!

    Drusus established around 12-13 BC a permanent Legionary settlement in Mainz/Mogontiacvm, (across the river from me). He died young, leading his soldiers in excursions across the Rhine. His legionaires erected a structure to honor his memory. Part of this structure stands to this day in Mainz, it is called the Drususstein. Here is a picture of this structure, as well as some coins in his name, or related to him, in my collection.

    Drususstein in Mainz - Zitadelle .png Nero Drusus Sestertius OBV:REV  - VGP - 2023.png


    Drusus sons Sestertius - Ex CNG 2007 - CADUCEUS - OBV:REV - 2023.png


    Drusus Caesares Dupondius Horseback - OBV:REV - OKP 2023.png
     
    Last edited: Aug 6, 2023
  8. cmezner

    cmezner do ut des Supporter

    Awesome coins @Eduard. Thank you so much for sharing them and the picture of the Drususstein. Drusus surely was an impressive commander and personality, enormously popular among his soldiers. The German imprecation "Das dich der Drus hole" may be traced to the misery that Drusus brought upon the Germanic tribes.
     
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  9. Curtis

    Curtis Well-Known Member

    That is a superb coin, @cmezner ! I have been studying the Clay Collection offerings since it went live. There are several coins that I hope will make it to bidding, but the one I wanted most was already bought outright (Vespasian/Titus Judaea Capta Denarius Mule = RIC 368, which would've perfectly fit my two favorite subcollections, "plate coins" & "barbarians & captives").

    While I don't have any coins from the Curtis Clay Collection, I do have many cataloged by him (like anyone who buys Roman coins from HJBerk)! I like Alexandrian coins, so my personal favorite catalog he wrote was the Gemini XIII (the Art Institute of Chicago / Robert L. Grover De-Accession Sale, many coins from which were ex-Dattari). Gemini XIII on Issuu; Lots on ACSearch (#378-490 for AIC/Grover). These are mine, originally from Gemini XIII group lots:

    Chicago Art Institute Robert Grover Dattari Alexandria Gemini XIII Group Shot.jpg



    And an article offprint -- "Nilus and the Four Seasons on a New As of Septimius Severus" from the Numismatic Chronicle, 1970 (available on JSTOR) -- signed by Curtis Clay & inscribed to Luke Scholing of J. Schulman, Amsterdam (after which it somehow made it into the Library of Lanz Numismatik, from which I bought it). A prior draft won the 1969 Barclay Head Prize for Numismatics at Oxford:
    Curtis Clay to Luuk Scholing Jacques Schulman.jpg




    Finally, here is my Nero Claudius Drusus Sestertius -- far inferior to the OP coin!!

    Nero Claudius Drusus Sestertius Draft 2.png
     
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  10. AncientJoe

    AncientJoe Well-Known Member

    Great coin! Hopefully the thousands of Lollapalooza fans didn't make your travels more complex!
     
    Last edited: Aug 6, 2023
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  11. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    What a beautiful ancient coin. Congratulations
     
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