Just two bronze coins of Tiberius, one from Lyons, the other one from Antioch As or dupondius, Lugdunum (Lyons, France), AD 12-14. AE 27 mm, 12.40 g, 11 h Obv.: TI CAESAR AVGVST F IMPERAT VII, laureate head of Tiberius right rev.: the Altar of Lugdunum, decorated with the corona civica flanked by figures holding palms; to left and right, Victories holding wreaths on columns, facing one another ; exergue : ROM ET AVG RIC I, Augustus 245 AE 20.5, Antioch (Hatay, Turkey), AD 31/2. AE 20.5 mm, 8.11 g, 12 h Obv.: TI CAESAR AVG TR POT XXXIII, laureate head of Tiberius right rev.: large SC in wreath RPC I, 4273 Just for the pleasure of seeing other ones here. Please post your coins of Tiberius ! Thanks
TIBERIUS, AD 14-37 AR Denarius (18.61mm, 3.72g, 12h) Struck AD 16-21. Lugdunum mint Obverse: TI CAESAR DIVI AVG F AVGVSTVS, laureate head of Tiberius right Reverse: PONTIF MAXIM, female figure seated right, holding vertical scepter and branch, on chair with plain legs above double line References: RIC I 26, RCV 1763 Old cabinet toning. Some corrosion pits on reverse. Fine portrait of Tiberius. From the A.K. Collection. This coin was published in the numismatic journal Money Trend (Jan. 2008 issue), in Dr. Wendelin Kellner's article "Ungewöhnliche und irreguläre Römermünzen" (page 135, abb. 2):
An uncommon issue (not rare - just uncommon) of Tiberius from a multiple lot: AE 24 10.280 g, 2h Hispania Tarraconensis, Calagurris Nassica Iulia, 14 - 37 AD Lucius Fulvius Sparsus and Lucius Saturninus duoviri as can be read on the reverse legend: M(uncipium) C(alagurris) I(ulia) L(ucio) Ful(vio) Sparso L(ucio) Saturnino IIvir(i) RPC I, 448; Vives 159–5; Hill 37–1; Ruiz 24; GMI 692–3; Ripollès (Madrid, 2005) 2061; ACIP 3128; SNG Copenhagen 585; FAB 429 For the legends TI AVGVS DIVI AVGVSTI F IMP CAESAR on the obverse and on the reverse M•C•I, names of duoviri and IIVIR L. FVL(vio) SPARSO, L. SATVRNINO (Pl. XXXVII, 1), Heiss notices the form of the titulature of Tiberius, in which IMP CAESAR comes at the end, and recalls the statement of Suetonius and Cassius Dio, that Tiberius would not use Imperator as a praenomen. The generalization (Mattingly, B.M.C., Rom. Emp.,I, p. lxvii.) that while “Augustus used 'Imperator' as a praenomen, Tiberius, Caligula and Claudius abstained from its use entirely" requires modification, in the light of these coins of Calagurris, and those of Caesaraugusta under Caligula; but of course, Spanish usage of Imperator may not have been strictly correct. http://numismatics.org/digitallibrary/ark:/53695/nnan86651 Ob.: TI AVGVS DIVI AVGVSTI F IMP CAESAR (Tiberius Augustus, son of the divine Augustus, Imperator Caesar) Laureate head of Tiberius to r. Rev.: M•C•I at left; L•FVL•SPARSO above bull standing to r.; II VIR before; and L•SATVRNINO below.
James Tiberius Kirk-us The rudder on the reverse is from the Enterprise Galley RI Tiberius, sinister left AE As 14-37 CE Laureate- Pont Max Globe Rudder RIC I 58