i cannot affort the real one( Foure Augustus)

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by ro1974, Mar 11, 2017.

  1. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

    Foure denarius Augustus _DSCf6834.jpg

     
    chrsmat71, Bing, gregarious and 12 others like this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. dadams

    dadams Well-Known Member

    Fourrée -- does that mean is this a contemporaneous counterfeit?
     
    gregarious and Paul M. like this.
  4. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

    A fourree is a coin, most often a counterfeit, struck with a base metal core that has been plated with a precious metal to look like its official solid metal counterpart. The term derived from a French word meaning "stuffed,‟ is most applied to ancient silver plated coins such as Roman denarii and Greek drachms, but may be used to describe any plated coin.

    The most obvious way to detect a fouree is a plating break exposing the base metal core. Often, however, plating breaks are not immediately obvious and the first indicator that coin is a counterfeit is unofficial style. The style of the Maximinus I Thrax denarius above is very different from that of an official Roman mint denarius. On this coin the copper core is clearly visible. Not all ancient counterfeits are fourree but coins with odd style should be closely examined under magnification to search for plating breaks and signs of a base metal core.
     
  5. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member


    Counterfeiting of antiquity beter can i not say


    formerly was also made coins thats make the fouree

    i think they has not alot silver to put in coins, silver was in that time expensive

    still it is old
     
    Last edited: Mar 11, 2017
    dadams likes this.
  6. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

    :happy:
     
    Last edited: Mar 11, 2017
  7. dadams

    dadams Well-Known Member

    Thanks RO well said and exactly what I wanted to know. I like it! Hope you're hanging in there!! -d
     
    ro1974 likes this.
  8. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

    i am oke hehe wine and music
     
    dadams likes this.
  9. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

    922053.jpg
    not my coin the silver one and 3 times double the price
     
    chrsmat71, Bing, paschka and 2 others like this.
  10. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

    _DSCf6834.jpg
    and the old remake
     
    chrsmat71, Bing, paschka and 2 others like this.
  11. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

    Augustus (27 BC-AD 14). AR denarius (19mm, 3.66 gm, 4h). Peloponnesus mint, ca. 21 BC. AVGVSTVS, bare head of Augustus right / IOVI - OLVM, hexastyle temple of Zeus at Olympia, seen from the front, round shield in the pediment and palmettes on roof. RIC 472. BMCRE 666. BN 939. RSC 182. Rare. Pleasing old cabinet toning. NGC AU 4/5 - 5/5. Fine Style. The Temple of Zeus at Olympia, built in the mid fifth century BC, housed the gigantic statue of Zeus by the sculptor Phidias, named one of the Seven Wonders of the World by Philon of Byzantium. The temple itself was designed by the architect Libon and was considered the epitome of the Doric order. Augustus toured Greece in 21 BC and likely ordered the striking of this denarius type to celebrate his visit to the famous temple. The temple seems to have survived relatively unscathed until AD 425, when the pious Christian Emperor Theodosius II ordered its destruction. The statue may have been
     
    dadams likes this.
  12. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

  13. ro1974

    ro1974 Well-Known Member

    Fourée is a old coin and a remake from the silver ones
    with a litle silver
     
    paschka likes this.
  14. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

  15. Mikey Zee

    Mikey Zee Delenda Est Carthago

    That's a very nice fourree @ro1974 !!

    I keep saying I don't go after the 'ancient fakes', yet I have three of them and have a bid on another LOL

    Naturally, one would expect them to be far cheaper than their 'official' counterparts and I go after one or two per year on that basis. I just think they are cool historical curiosities....and they are ancient!

    A couple of mine:

    octavian fourree denar with croc.jpg rr 01fouree.jpg
     
    chrsmat71, Ajax, Okidoki and 8 others like this.
  16. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    here's a couple of my Augustus fourees. the 2nd portrait is most famous for it depicts Butthead, Bevis's counterpart, wearing a turbin>< Augustus fourees 001.JPG Augustus fourees 002.JPG
     
    chrsmat71, Ajax, Johndakerftw and 7 others like this.
  17. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Fouree or not @ro1974, that is a nice coin.
     
    Okidoki, ro1974 and gregarious like this.
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page