Post your most ugly struck coin

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by edteach, Jan 18, 2024.

  1. edteach

    edteach Well-Known Member

    There is Ugly Xmas sweater, how about ugly strike roman coin day? For a bit I have been looking for some examples to buy of really bad ugly strike Roman coins, Greek also but Roman coins I think have a better chance at having ugly strikes with some of the periods of civil war and the like.
     
    panzerman likes this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Inspector43

    Inspector43 More than 75 Years Active Collecting Supporter

    This Roman appears to be double or triple struck.
    IMG_6439.JPG IMG_6442.JPG
     
  4. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    This Faustina has a curious double strike reverse.
    Faustina II AE Sestertius. 19,80g, 33mm.
    DIVA FAV-STINA PIA, draped bust right / SIDERIBVS RECEPTA S-C, Faustina as Diana, standing right, holding long torch across body with both hands, crescent behind neck. RIC 1715, Cohen 215. SEAR 1988 # 1530
    Commemorative issue struck under Aurelius, circa
    175/6 AD.
    Reverse struck twice with clear images of two torches and two S of SC. Bizarrely, it circulated for a long time in this condition.
    20230907_182633__2_-side-removebg-preview.png
     
  5. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    [​IMG]
    Nero (54 - 68 A.D.)
    Egypt, Alexandria
    Billon Tetradrachm
    O: NE KΛAY KAIΣ ΣEB ΓEΡ AYTO, laureate head right.
    R: AΓPIΠΠINA, draped bust of Agrippina Junior right. LE . Dated RY 5 (AD 58/9)
    11.84g
    26mm
    RPC I 5231; Köln -; Milne 167; Emmett 107

    Ex. CNG Electronic Auction #76, Lot 33
    Ex. CNG Electronic Auction #157, Lot 108
    Ex T. R. McIntosh Collection

    Published on Wildwinds!

    [​IMG]
    Mark Antony and Octavian (41 B.C.)
    AR Denarius
    M. Barbatius Pollio, quaestor pro praetore
    O: Bare head of Mark Antony right.
    R: Bare head of Octavian right, wearing slight beard.
    Ephesus mint, Spring-early summer 41 B.C.
    3.5g
    20mm
    Crawford 517/2; CRI 243; Sydenham 1181
     
  6. Victor_Clark

    Victor_Clark all my best friends are dead Romans Dealer

    here is an unofficial overstrike that is pure ugly and delightful at the same time.

    Constantine II_FEL TEMP.jpg

    Constantine II GLORIA EXERCITVS maybe Lyon mint (17mm 2.2g) overstruck by an unofficial FEL TEMP REPARATIO fallen horseman maybe copying a Constantinople issue.
     
  7. ZoidMeister

    ZoidMeister Hamlet Squire of Tomfoolery . . . . .

  8. Curtis

    Curtis Well-Known Member

    panzerman and expat like this.
  9. Curtis

    Curtis Well-Known Member

    Not counting coins that became ugly from damage, etc., there are a lot of Iberian and Celtic coins that might qualify.

    Of course, they have their own artistic standards (think of Cubism), independent of Greco-Roman realism. As with Victor's imitative above, I'd put many of these in the "so-ugly-they're-beautiful" category. At least "so-ugly-they're-fascinating"!
    Carisa, Spain, Cores CC-3365, MIB, Jesus Vico.png
    Spain, Carisa AE Semis (9.94g, 23mm), 1st cent. BCE.
    Obv: Male head right.
    Rev: CARIS-A. Warrior on horse galloping left, holding large round shield.
    Ref/Prov: Colección Cores (v.1) 3365 (this coin) = Moneta Iberica [MIB] 194/13. Ex Jesús Vico 156 (Cores IX, 5 Mar 2020), Lot 35.


    Personally, I love the coin below. But if I'd been Ariarathes V (or VIII), I would've been pretty angry about the ugly portrait.

    This coin is pretty obviously imitative, as Otto Morkholm pointed out, but Bono Simonetta just couldn't accept it (he said it was struck during the troubles with Orophernes, c. 161-159 BCE, but no one else seems to believe it):

    Ariarathes V 3 or barbarous imitation ex Simonetta Cappadocia Bertolami BFA.jpg
    Kings of Cappadocia (Imitative) AR Drachm (3.70g, 19mm, 12h), mid/late 2nd cent. BCE.
    Obv: Diademed head right.
    Rev: Athena Nikephoros standing l., resting hand on shield, spear behind; monogram left, nonsense character in exergue. (Nonsense legend transcribed by B. Simonetta as "VI[AOAI V]AVII VVN˩AV".)
    Ref/Prov: This coin = B. Simonetta 1958, RIN, p.17 (Ar. V, No. 12), ex. 3 = B. Simonetta 1961, NC, p. 33 (Ar V, No. 14b), ex. 3 = B. Simonetta 1974 (RIN), Pl. III, No. 10 = B. Simonetta 1977, 15b, Pl. III, 4 = A.M. Simonetta 2007 (Parthica), Ar. VIII?, p. 77, 3b / pl. XV.3a.


    But, for coins in my collection that I actually find dreadfully unattractive -- and were that way from the start -- the Palaeologans take the prize. Believe it or not, the type below really doesn't get much better than this:

    Andronicus II Michael IX Trachy Ex Bendall (CNG 473).jpg
    Andronicus II & Michael IX Æ Trachy (25mm, 2.11 g [2.05g per CNG], 6h), Class XXIV, Thessalonica mint, c. 1294-1320.
    Obv: Two concentric circles bisected by three vertical lines.
    Rev: Andronicus and Michael standing facing, holding between them a staff surmounted by cross within ring.
    Ref: DOC Class XXIV, 778-9; LPC p. 232, 6; PCPC 235 (type noted, but no specimen cataloged from his coll. in 1979); LBC 814; SB 2458; Ratto – ; Bendall, "Hoard of Thessalonican Trachea": 12 specimens recorded (this coin possibly from the "US portion" of the hoard, examined in the stock of HJB, 2000, but not tabulated in 2001 NC article).
    Prov: Ex Simon Bendall (1937-2019) Collection (with hand-written collector tag), cataloged for CNG by Peter J. Donald.
     
  10. Mr.MonkeySwag96

    Mr.MonkeySwag96 Well-Known Member

    panzerman, Johndakerftw and Curtis like this.
  11. Mr.MonkeySwag96

    Mr.MonkeySwag96 Well-Known Member

    Few coins can beat a Late 3rd century "barbarous radiate" in the ugly department. My example imitates an Antoninianus of the Gallic emperor Tetricus:

    [​IMG]

    Barbarous Radiates, 3rd Century AD AE 'Antoninianus', Mint in Britain or Gaul, 16mm, 1.64 grams Obverse: Radiate head of emperor right, blundered legend around. Reverse: Annona (?) standing left holding grain ears.
     
    Johndakerftw, Curtis and Bing like this.
  12. Ancientnoob

    Ancientnoob Money Changer

    You know someone lost their finger for this one.
    overstrike.jpg
     
    Johndakerftw, panzerman and Bing like this.
  13. mrweaseluv

    mrweaseluv Supporter! Supporter

    ZoidMeister and panzerman like this.
  14. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Howabout ugly designs on coins. I may win this contest/ 4 of mine are unique/ thus I sacrificed myself for the hobby/ taking on so many ugly coins.
     

    Attached Files:

  15. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    5e57f13e7bfa2bcb1973bc60c730d736 (7).jpg 177c8395376ba49a7811cea644382051.jpg a9d4a06a3f07115c2ea3602fb071f163 (2).jpg b51ea0ee79b1a7356776ab78a4803b68 (3).jpg f333a48399e757faf5c9fe99a1ada4a3 (1).jpg e9259c69c9c1b350f445a5c4fb1b8ad6 (3).jpg e5b6bd64f7266b49d19f810b728caf4e (2).jpg
     
  16. Heavymetal

    Heavymetal Well-Known Member

  17. red_spork

    red_spork Triumvir monetalis

    I spotted this coin on eBay only identified as a Roman Republic quinarius and fairly cheap. A nicer example of this extremely rare type would have cost me probably $5k minimum in the current market so I was happy to grab this terrible example. For those not aware, the Rome mint silver fractions(quinarii and sestertii) from this time period are all rare as hens teeth and lately have seen a massive surge in hammer prices even compared to other RR issues.
    20230130175513-c700ba46-me (1).png
    Roman Imperatorial period AR Quinarius(1.74g), A. Licinius Nerva, 47 B.C., Rome mint. Helmeted head of Minerva right; behind, NERVA downwards. Border of dots/Victory walking right, holding wreath in right hand and palm-branch over left shoulder with left hand; before, A•LICINI downwards. Border of dots. Crawford 454/3
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page