A while back on eBay I picked up a Roman Republic denarius of L. Antestius Gragulus. The seller thought it was a fake and so had it priced at $4.99 "Buy It Now." The photos made it look like a Lincoln penny - very coppery, but otherwise I thought it looked pretty good in regards to workmanship, etc.. In hand, it looks silver, with a mellow old cabinet toning (my photos also make it look coppery-er than it is). There is the hole, and the engraving, so it is very damaged, but the weight is 3-4 grams (my scale is horrible). I think it's real (but willing to be corrected). The reason I am sharing this is the "C S" engraving in the obverse field. This looks very much like love tokens I've seen from the late-18th and early-19th centuries. In addition to the RR, I have included a Queen Anne crown of 1707 with a similar style engraving from 1804. Any thoughts? Other examples of ancient coins like this? Roman Republic Denarius L. Antestius Gragulus (136 B.C.) Helmeted head of Roma rt; monogram XVI below chin, behind, GRAG / Jupiter in quadriga left w. thunderbolt; below, L·ANTES; ROMA in exergue. Antestia 9; BMC 4029; Syd. 451; Craw. 238/1
Cool coin! I like the "old" engraving on an ancient coin. I have several wedding medals from the 19th century. The engraving looks a lot like yours. I would vote - really an ancient coin.
Very interesting. I've not collected modern coins in several decades, but I did know of engravings like these. Makes for a nice conversation piece (and, of course, the price was just right). Congrats.
Oh. I. WANT. THAT. You're playing one of my favorite tunes, now. You can see some of my love tokens by following the link in my signature. If you ever tire of that piece, I'd swap something nice for it or be a willing buyer at more than 12 times what you paid. It would be a nice addition to my hat. But I digress. Thanks for sharing that. I've seen Georgian and Victorian love tokens done on old host coins before, but never on an ancient. I am not especially surprised to see one, however. Really, I'm more surprised to have not seen one up until now.
I'm jaded and hard to impress and I like to come up with my own way of saying something... but this time, all I can do is parrot the rest of the thread and squawk: Cool!
Yes, that is a better color match - did you adjust it? My photography/computer skills are pretty basic. Nice work!
Thank you so much - everyone - for the enthusiastic replies. lordmarcovan, I haven't tired of it yet, but I will let you know when that happens. I really enjoyed going through your love token posts - that is quite a collection. I've always found "altered" coins to be quite interesting myself and whenever one comes my way, cheap, I generally go for it. I have quite a few brooches, ex-brooches, holed, etc. but few actual outright love tokens. Here is a weird one I've had for years - as a love token, it makes no sense to me - on the reverse of a very smoothed 1807 Spanish Colonial 8 reales (Mexico, I presume): As for ancient love tokens, I've never seen one either - though there is a really interesting forvum moonmoth site on holed ancients (you've all probably seen this): http://www.forumancientcoins.com/moonmoth/holed_coins.html I have a lot of holed coins in my collection, but not many ancients. Holing an ancient in modern times (even 1800) strikes me as being tricky what with the metal sometimes becoming brittle, crystalizing, etc. It seems to me they'd probably break more often than not. Anyways, thank you all for such enthusiastic responses.
Thanks for looking at some of my love token stories, and for the link to the moonmoth page. Fun read. Now, as to your amazing engraved 8-reales piece, I was going to suggest a mother's token, with the birthdates of all her children. But then I looked at those dates, and there is no way the same woman could have given birth on all of them, so closely spaced in time. And then there's the "23 years" thing. So a memento, obviously, but of what? Fascinating. And that is a superb love token (if a bit mysterious, as they can be). Unusual and large host coin, nice engraving. Certainly appears to have been engraved around the final 1891 date mentioned, too, based upon the style. I'd love to see a picture of the other side, too. PS- I just started that index in my sig line, and as such I did not link up my onetime-trademark "Holey" collection.
Thank you for the speculation on that oddball 8 reales love token. Your thoughts on the mother's token might be on the right track - maybe it is a grandmother's token? The birthdates could be from different kids. Although the 23 years doesn't really fit in... I put the "portrait" side of that love token as a thumbnail in my original post. Here it is (note the crude CAD engraved lightly on the neck): I love your holey coins hat and vest - I sometimes wear some of my coin brooches, although I was humiliated at a bar once wearing a cut-out Panama Balboa on my coat lapel. Amy, a friend of mine with a sarcastic streak said to me: "Whoa! The Sheriff's in town!" Er, yeah, it does kinda look like a Sheriff's badge, or a Texas Ranger's badge made out of an old cutout Mexican 5 pesos... I just kept drinking beer - that usually takes the sting out of barside comments from tall blondes, at least to some extent. Nowadays I only wear coin pins if they are half-dollar size or smaller. I don't ever want to be mistaken for law enforcement again.
What a great piece. I'm on a small screen so I just assumed the thumbnail image was also of the engraved side. Yaaay! I'm not the only geek to have worn his coin collection out in public! Hey, you go, "Sheriff"! Dare to be different! LOL I once wore the hole - er - whole - "Holey Coin" ensemble to a Mexican restaurant during a break from a coin show. Surprisingly (or perhaps not) it drew far fewer stares and comments from members of the Great Unwashed general public than it had on the bourse floor. Not even any reactions of the, "Hey, Honey - check out the weirdo!" kind. Can't say I particularly recommend this, however. While splattered salsa verde does no particular damage to a holed 1791 Sierra Leone dollar if discovered in time, it can be a tad messy. Wear a bib or napkin when dining out with your treasures.
Great piece, and a sharp eye. Attached is a coin I've had for a bit. I keep it in my chop marked and engraved pieces. An inscription of love for a man's niece on the reverse of a Peru 8 Real, cm for the Phillipines, inscribed in German. What a trail of use.