Janus-headed as from a Roman mint in Sicily

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by red_spork, Jul 2, 2016.

  1. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

    Also, if you are interested in the mythology of Janus, I cannot recommend highly enough this article by Rabun Taylor. If you can't get access I have it somewhere but it will take me awhile to get to.

    image.jpg
    Rabun is a great scholar and this article is one of his best.
     
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  3. red_spork

    red_spork Triumvir monetalis

    Thanks for the recommendation! I've downloaded the article and will read it tonight.
     
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  4. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

    What puzzles me, is the weight and date of the Janus As in the OP.
    Shouldn't an As of 200-190 BC weigh approx 40 gram instead of 6 gram (adding some weight for the missing part)
     
  5. red_spork

    red_spork Triumvir monetalis

    Not necessarily - 20 gram asses were struck in Sardinia, Sicily or Southern Italy during the second Punic War(cf. McCabe's paper on anonymous bronzes from Essays Russo, group H1) so we know that bronzes struck for use elsewhere were not necessarily struck to Roman weight standards standards. These may well have been struck at some standard already in-use by the locals and meant purely for local circulation.
     
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  6. Alegandron

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

    It is how I understand it also. Similarly, Rome minted Litrae for So Italia trade, but the Quartuncia was reserved for Roman circulation. Parallel mintages for local accepted markets.
     
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