Super Galley @Theodosius ... just great! I have very few... a couple Anthony's and an Allectus: RImp Marc Antony AR Den 32-31 BC Leg III Ship Eagle Standards S 1479 Cr 544-15 RI Allectus 293-296 AE Quinarius London Virtus Galley AE17 2-3g S 13870 RIC 55
Agreat OP galley coin, we seldom see the "full sail" stuff I guess Republic, Sextans struck in Rome, circa 211-206 BC Head of Mercury right, wearing petasus, two pellets above helmet ROMA, Prow of galley right, surmounted by a victory right 5.11 gr Ref : RCV #1218 ROMAN IMPERATORS, Sextus Pompeius and Q. Nasidius, Denarius Mint moving with Sextus Pompeius, Sicily, 42-39 BC NEPTVNI, head of Pompey the great right, trident before head, dolphin below Q.NASIDIVS at exergue, galley sailing right, star in upper field 3.92 gr Ref : HCRI # 235, RCV # 1390, Crawford # 483/2, Sydenham # 1350, Cohen # 20 Ex Freeman & Sear, Ex Barry Feirstein collection Ex Roma Numismatics Mark Antony, Denarius struck in a travelling mint, c.32-31 BC ANT AVG III VIR RPC, Galley right LEG IV, Legionary eagle between two standards 3.67 gr Ref : HCRI #352, Cohen #30 Constantinopolis, AE 3 struck in Siscia, 2nd officina CONSTANTINOPOLIS, Helmeted Constantinopolis left Anepigraph, Victory left leaning on shield, BSIS at exergue 2.64 gr Ref : RC #3890 var, Cohen #21 Valentinianus II, AE2 struck in Constantinople, 4th officina D N VALENTINIANVS P F AVG, Helmeted, diademed, cuirassed bust of Valentinian, holding spear in right hand GLORIA RO-MANORUM, Valentinain standing on a galley, driven by a victory, Wreath in field, CON delta at exergue 4.93 gr Ref : RIC # 52, Cohen #22, RC #4161, LRBC #2151 Q
I was reluctant to post this because I'm still experiencing anxiety about the possible loss. I purchased a number of Herodian coins which apparently have gone missing between here and Israel. I haven't given up on them yet. They still may be hung up at U.S. Customs and will appear at my mailbox one day. Anyway, here is my Herod Archelaus ship's prow prutah wherever it may be.
Here is an of Hadrian which I have not posted before. Hadrian, 117-138, AE As COS III (125-128), Rome. Obv: Draped bust r. Rev: Galley sailing l. 5 oarsmen RIC 674
This coin is part of a series of coinage from Constantinople (GLORIA EXERCITVS, GLORIA ROMANORVM, LIBERTAS PVBLICA, SPES PVBLIC and CONSTANTINIANA DAFNE) summing up the civil war with Licinius. The reverse alludes to the naval victory of Crispus where he captured Byzantium; soon to be renamed Constantinople. Constantine I A.D. 327-8 CONSTANTINVS MAX AVG; head with rosette diadem LIBERTAS PVBLICA; Victory standing left on galley, wreath in both hands; B in left. In ex. CONS RIC VII Constantinople 25
Killer ship coins all! Here's my meager group of prow and galley's. Judaea, Ascalon AE14. War galley Phoenicia, Tyre. Ae18 Galley Thrace, Coela. Commodus AE20. Prow Caria, Knidos. Ae12. Prow over club. CYPRUS. Salamis. Æ12. Late 4th cent. BC. Megaris, Megara. Ae12. Prow/Tripod Phoenicia, Sidon AE24 Astarte standing on galley Thessalonica, Macedonia, AE19. Zeus/prow Uncertain mint. Vespasian AE18. Prow.
Not ancient but... Hey! I like ships. Netherlands Rechenpfennig. Dreimaster segelschiff-Durch Glück und Kunst Louis XV / Segelschiff(sailing boat) - durch Glück und Kunst(by luck and art), Johann George Holtzhey 1695-1760. 1841 Hard Times token. USS Constitution MILLIONS FOR DEFENSE, NOT ONE CENT FOR TRIBUTE.
I love a seafaring thread! As long as we're on the subject, I'll add a mystery coin that I found at NYINC. It's either an issue of Demetrios I or II, so it's not that big of a mystery. The obverse is off-center to be sure (Hey - how do y'all like my hairdo?), but the coin is in EF with a superb galley on the reverse. I can make out part of ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ ∆ΗΜΗΤΡΙΟΥ at the top, and that should be a date directly under, which I'm having a hard time reading. Under the prow appears to be Phoenician, which would make it a Tyre issue, probably Demetrios I. Still working on it, but a bi-lingual Seleucid bronze is pretty cool. This is the first one I've seen...