Hurray for Fourrées!

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Gavin Richardson, Jan 7, 2017.

  1. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    My university has been given a modest collection of 31 Roman and Biblical coins. A student and I are collaborating on a project to catalog them properly.

    The image below is of a Vespasian denarius. At first glance I thought it was clearly a fourrée, especially since the bronze core seems to be peeking through the bottom left of the obverse. However, the brown stuff on the emperor’s cheek and hair seems to be protruding out from the coin, or lying on top of it. I thought a fourrée would only have bronze visible “inside” the coin, so to speak.

    My long-winded preface to simple question: can a fourrée look like this? The coin weighs 2.96 g. 20 VESPASIAN DENARIUS.jpg
     
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  3. Gallienus

    Gallienus coinsandhistory.com Supporter

    Could be a fourree, can you post a better pix? As far as the surface corrosion do you have any guess as to the composition? Is it copper, copper-oxides, organic, or dirt? I'd imagine that fourrees can attract other metals to bonding on the surface thru oxidation of the insides. Oxidation of the insides can cause a reduction (causing deposition) of metals on the outsides.

    Essentially a clad coin, with the more chemically active material on the inside, I'd guess that fourrees have "more of a predisposition" for this type of corrosion as opposed to solid silver coins.
     
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  4. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    That is not a fourree but a solid coin that was hoarded with some copper which fused to its surface. I post a fourree of Vespasian (copper under silver) and a Domitian like yours with copper on top that is so well stuck it did not polish off as someone obviously tried.
    re1320bb0318.jpg re1440bb0257.jpg

    I also post a coin more like yours than you realize. In 1989 I bought a group lot of "fourrees" from a big name dealer. It included the denarius below which, at the time, had lumps of transferred base metal on top of the silver. They cleaned off. After 28 years I do not recall what I used but suspect it was lemon juice or vinegar.
    re1220bb0319.jpg
     
  5. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    Thanks very much for these responses. Maybe when I get back to the coins next week I can post a better photo. But I think Doug answered my question; it does look more like fused base metal. I'm sure this will not be the last question I have as I move through these donated coins.
     
  6. Aethelred

    Aethelred The Old Dead King

    Gavin, I personally look forward to seeing more coins from this collection.
     
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  7. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    Well, when I say it's a modest collection, I do mean modest. Fairly common coins in not particularly high grades. Nonetheless, every coin tells a story. And this donation (not mine) will help some college students be able to personally handle some coins from the period. It's already a good learning experience for my undergraduate assistant helping me write the catalog. It's really her project, and she's taking a classical literature directed study with me and a New Testament class. Really good way to work with 30 coins and learn some context at the same time. I'll post more photos as questions arise.
     
  8. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    I have a couple of fourees in my collection.

    There is this one, completely denuded of its plating, which counterfeits the CONCORDIAE AETERNAE reverse type of Plautilla:

    Plautilla Fouree.jpg
    Plautilla Concordia Aeternae denarius.jpg

    And this one of Orbiana, which has a FECVND AVGVSTAE reverse type used by her mother-in-law, Julia Mamaea, not an official issue of Orbiana.

    Orbiana Fouree.jpg
    Mamaea FECVND AVGVSTAE Denarius.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jan 7, 2017
  9. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Cool fourree, Gavin ... interesting project for you and your student (cool)

    Ummm, all I have is a few sweet fourree examples (I hope that it somehow helps)

    Cheers (good work)


    cheers.gif

    Fourree Kings of Macedon, Philip III

    Kings of Macedon Fourree.jpg


    Fourre, Baktria, Indo-Greek, Hermaios

    Baktria Indo Greek Hermaios Fourree.jpg


    Fourree => Nicephorus-II Phocas, w Basil-II

    Nicephorus II Phocas Fourree.jpg
     
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  10. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    Yes, looking at as many examples as possible is probably the best education I can get. Is that a gold fouree? I bet some Byzantine merchant was really mad when he saw that bronze start peeking through…
     
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  11. Nemo

    Nemo Well-Known Member

    Here's one very uncommon fourée in that the type is found more often as a fourée than solid silver. JudaeaDevicta.jpg

    The style is also better than many solid examples imho.
     
  12. David Atherton

    David Atherton Flavian Fanatic

    Doug is correct. The Vespasian is not a fourrée for all the reasons he has given. This post has reminded me that someday I need to start my collection of Flavian fourrées, it's long overdue!

    I too am curious to see more of the collection your cataloguing. Modest is in the eye of the beholder.
     
    Last edited: Jan 7, 2017
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  13. David Atherton

    David Atherton Flavian Fanatic

    I'm glad you posted that coin in this thread. I for the life of me cannot figure out why more of this type is found plated than solid. Were they official? Which begs many other questions. Were they the product of a talented local forger (a former mint worker?) who just happened to pick one type to copy? I'm afraid we may never have the answers to any of these intriguing questions.
     
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  14. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    I'm sure a "Fourrees for Dummies" thread has popped up here before. But can someone give me the basic version? I always understood fourrees to be a product of the following situation:

    Roman mint workers were slaves. They might not have had much to lose. Some would steal dies for ancient counterfeiting, covering a bronze base metal with silver or gold washes. Thus, the ancient fourrees we see are unofficial counterfeits.

    Is this understanding fundamentally accurate? Or is it, as I would suppose, an oversimplification?

    If this query has been explored ad nauseam before, perhaps someone could direct me to the relevant thread.
     
    Last edited: Jan 7, 2017
  15. FitzNigel

    FitzNigel Medievalist

    I know there has been some talk of fourrees, but I'm not aware of an explanatory thread. I'm afraid I'm little help when it comes to fourrees, but here is my Caesar fourree I unwittingly thought was genuine (I'll blame youth and inexperience):

    01-R2-Caesar-FR-DE-01.jpg
     
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  16. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    Well, it's genuine all right. A genuine fourree. I find them to be every bit as interesting and collectable as official issues. Auction houses might disagree, but that's OK.
     
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  17. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    If I were going to give a primer here on fourrees it would probably be similar to the four pages here which I posted in 1997.
    http://www.forumancientcoins.com/dougsmith/fourree.html

    In the past 20 years, I have obtained several nicer ones that I might add to the discussion but my opinions on the concepts are there. The vast majority of fourrees were fakes made by counterfeiters and had nothing to do with the official mint. If that is true for 99% of examples, tat does not prove the case put forward by our mainstream experts that ALL fit this description. They are a subject that will never be studied fully which is probably OK since the establishment professionals have enough trouble getting funding to advance studies in official coins. I really discourage you from paying high prices for these coins.

    You think he was happy when he saw the silver under the gold here??? Gold sticks to silver better than to copper so this coin could have circulated quite a while before it was discovered.
    rz0455bb1174.jpg

    My favorite fourree from recent years....or half of it, anyway.
    g01335fd2800.jpg
     
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  18. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    A helpful response and related webpage. I especially enjoyed the Otho denarius and that remarkable Hadrian brockage.

    Don't worry about having to discourage me from spending high dollar on fourrees. My wife is way ahead of you.
     
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  19. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    M VOLTEIUS M F.jpg
    M. VOLTEIUS M.F. ROMAN REPUBLIC; GENS VOLTEIA
    AR Fouree Denarius
    OBVERSE: Laureate & helmeted bust of Attis right; shield behind
    REVERSE: Cybele seated right in chariot drawn by two lions; OQ above
    Rome 78BC
    2.9g, 18mm
    Cr385/4; Syd 777, Volteia 4
    A PLAUTIUS.jpg
    A PLAUTIUS ROMAN REPUBLIC; GENS PLANCIA
    AR Fouree Denarius
    OBVERSE: Turreted hd of Cybele right, A PLAVTIVS before, AED CVR SC behind
    REVERSE: supplicant offerng palm-branch, camel behind; IVDAEVS before, BACCHIVS below
    Rome 55 BC
    18mm, 3.2g
    Cr431/1, Syd 932, Hendin 741, Plautia 13
    Titus 1.jpg
    TITUS
    Fouree Denarius
    OBVERSE: CAES VESPAS AVG TR P COS III, Laureate head right
    REVERSE: Foreparts of two capricorns springing in opposing directions, supporting round shield inscribed S C; globe below
    Struck at Rome, 80/1AD
    3.06g, 18mm
    RIC II 357 (Titus); RSC 497
    Julia Domna 1.jpg
    JULIA DOMNA
    Fouree Denarius
    OBVERSE: IVLIA DOMNA AVG - Draped bust right
    REVERSE: BONI EVENTVS - Genius standing left, holding grain ears and fruit basket
    Struck at Rome, 193-211 AD
    2.8g, 17mm
    RIC 608
    Julia Domna 3.jpg
    JULIA DOMNA
    Fouree Denarius
    OBVERSE: IVLIA PIA FELIX AVG, draped bust right
    REVERSE: DIANA LVCIFERA, Diana standing left, holding long torch with both hands
    Struck at Rome, 211-217 AD Struck under Caracalla
    3,1 g; 18,3 mm
    RIC 373A [Caracalla]
     
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  20. Gallienus

    Gallienus coinsandhistory.com Supporter

    I have one fourree; bought early last year [2016] from CNG. It's of your avatar: a Lydian double silver siglos. I've been in Brazil so I haven't yet been able to get the coin or see it since buying it. It may be one of the earliest fourrees around???
     
  21. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Gallienus => ummm, are you referring to my avatar?

    => well, let's see the coin-photo
     
    Last edited: Jan 8, 2017
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