Julia Mamaea?

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Rob C, Jul 20, 2017.

  1. Rob C

    Rob C Member

    Hello all. Recently pulled this coin from a bracelet. I have never dealt with ancient coins. To me ancient coins are my 1888 Indian heads. I have spent about 15 hours trying to find this exact coin. It appears to be Julia Mamaea, but can't find an exact match. The bigger question I suppose is how can I tell if it is authentic. It weighs 1.54g and the size of a flattened nickel. Any guidance is greatly appreciated.
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  3. Ajax

    Ajax Well-Known Member

    Looks like it's supposed to be RIC 358 but wrong metal. It should be silver.
     
    Rob C likes this.
  4. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    That coin is copper and very underweight. I suspect it is a limes denarius or a (probably ancient) forgery.

    It's supposed to be this one:

    Mamaea Venus Victrix denarius.jpg
    Julia Mamaea, AD 222-235
    Roman AR denarius; 3.27 gm, 18.7 mm
    Rome, AD 231, 12th emission
    Obv: IVLIA MAMAEA AVG, diademed and draped bust, right
    Rev: VENVS VICTRIX, Venus standing left, holding helmet and scepter; shield at her feet
    RIC 358; BMCRE 713; Cohen 76; RCV 8216
     
    Mikey Zee, Rob C, gregarious and 6 others like this.
  5. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    regardless of what it is, you should make some friends here by liberating it from jewelry:) good job!
     
    Rob C likes this.
  6. Rob C

    Rob C Member

    You guys are awesome, thanks! I think the coin thanked me when I liberated it. I'll hang on to it for now. Won't fit in a vending machine anyway. ;) Thanks again.
     
    Roman Collector likes this.
  7. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    L I B E R T Y!!!!!!!!
     
    Alegandron and Roman Collector like this.
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