Tranquillina - Singara Issue

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by ancient coin hunter, Aug 28, 2017.

  1. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    Furia Sabinia Tranquillina (c. 225 – aft. 244) was the Empress of Rome and wife of Emperor Gordian III. She was the young daughter of the Praetorian Prefect Timesitheus by an unknown wife.

    In 241 her father was appointed the head of the Praetorian Guard by the Roman Emperor Gordian III. In May that year, Tranquillina had married Gordian. She became a Roman Empress and received the honorific title of Augusta. Her marriage to Gordian was an admission by the young emperor of both Timesitheus' political indispensability and Tranquillina’s suitability as an empress. (Courtesy Wikipedia)

    Tranquillina Augusta, 241-244 C.E.
    AE25, 10.7g
    MESOPOTAMIA, Singara
    Obverse: SAB TRANQVILLINA AVG, Diademed and draped bust right
    Reverse: Veiled Bust of Tyche Right; Centaur Sagittarius leaping right and discharging bow above
    Reference: BMC Arabia p. 136, 14; SNG Copenhagen 258

    I recently won this coin at auction in @John Anthony 's latest auction.

    tranquillina1.jpg

    tranquillina2.jpg

    Please post your Tranquillinas or Singara coins here.
     
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  3. Youngcoin

    Youngcoin Everything Collector

    I don't have any myself but nice coin very nice detail and story.
     
  4. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    My only one of her.

    [​IMG]
    Tranquillina (241 - 244 A.D.)
    Æ 21
    Cappadocia, Caesarea Year 7 = 244 AD
    O: CAB TPANKVLLINA AVG,Diademed and draped bust of right.
    R: MHTP KAI B NE ET-Z, Six grain ears bound together.
    6.1g
    21mm
    Syd 618
     
  5. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Very nice @ancient coin hunter ! Nice write up and great coin! Nice and hefty.

    I have none from the Singara mint (sounds cool as it is Mesopotamia). I see at a quick glance that acsearch does not have too many listings.

    Here is my Tranquilina:

    upload_2017-8-28_16-14-27.png
    RI Prv Thrace Deultum Tranquillina 241-244 CE Æ 22mm 6-6 g Hermes purse caduceus SNG Bulgaria 1504-8
     
  6. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Another interesting pickup, @ancientone :)

    I hate to nitpick but those images are so dark that few details are seen. Why not just use JA's images, or at least show them in addition to yours?
     
  7. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Interesting pickup, @ancientone

    Tranquillina.jpg
    TRANQUILLINA
    AE23
    OBVERSE: CAB TPANKVLLEINA CEB, diademed & draped bust right
    REVERSE: ADRIANOPOLEITWN, Artemis running right, holding bow, drawing arrow from quiver behind shoulder, dog running at her feet
    Struck at Hadrianopolis, 241-43 AD
    6.1g, 23mm
    Moushmov 2764
     
  8. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    I actually had to take several photos in order to get these images @TIF - kinda dark I agree but the coin has a nice black patina. Next time I'll try to use more light, rather than the natural daylight. Thanks for the feedback and I'll see if I can post John's original image.
     
  9. Ed Snible

    Ed Snible Well-Known Member

    Very nice @@ancient coin hunter. The picture seems dark on my monitor. It might be worth lightening digitally.

    deultum-both.jpg
    Thrace, Deultum. Tranquillina (241-244AD) AE22 6.64g
    Obv: SAB TRANQVILLINA AVG; Draped bust right, wearing stephane
    Rev: [COL FL] PAC DEVLT Perseus and Andromeda standing facing one another; Andromeda on left with left hand raised, Perseus on right, holding harpa and gorgon’s head, releasing Andromeda from her chains; sea-monster turned to stone below.
    Youroukova, Deultum 411; SNG Bulgaria 1518-20; Varbanov 2945. Mionnet Suppl. II #574
     
  10. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    That's a very nice mythological theme on the reverse Ed. Congrats on having this coin in your collection. Thanks for the editing tip, too.
     
  11. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

    Very beautyfull Tranquillina , ancient coin hunter , congrats.

    Had to lighten up your pic to see the beauty of this coin :pics:

    P1190058tranquillina ancient coin hunter CT.jpg

    Here's my ugly duckling of the same coin:

    P1190058 new.jpg

    Hope Randygeki will show his coin too, also a BMC 14.
     
  12. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    This is JA's photo of the OP coin.

    singara_6.jpg

    Much better, and I can see the reverse. Before looking at this picture, OPs picture made me think the reverse featured a heard of elephants or a pile of rocks :p
     
  13. Bart9349

    Bart9349 Junior Member

    I love the history and the coins. Thank you.

    I always need to do a little review of those third century Roman emperors (and their wives):



    TETTraqO.jpg TETTranquillinar.jpg

    (Tranquillina is my guest, but these are not my pictures.)
     
  14. Mikey Zee

    Mikey Zee Delenda Est Carthago

    Cool posts everyone!!

    :( I lack any of Tranquillina and none struck from Singara:grumpy:
     
  15. Valentinian

    Valentinian Well-Known Member

    Here is a Gordian III of Singara, Mesopotamia.
    GordianIIISingara0520.jpg
    20 mm. 7.50 grams.
    Centaur Sagittarius galloping right and shooting bow
    Legionary standard behind
    Lindgren and Kovacs 2625. BMC Greek --, McClaean --, Weber --, Hunterian --, SNG Milano --, Winesman Falghera --, SNG Swiss II --, SNG Copenhagen and supplement --, Lindgren III --, Peus 366 --.

    Rare.
     
  16. Pellinore

    Pellinore Well-Known Member

    Nice portrait and fine little centaur!
     
    ancient coin hunter likes this.
  17. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    I really considered bidding on that coin, it's nice! I dig that little centaur. Tranquillina is still on my list.
     
  18. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

  19. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Here's mine, an obverse die-match to Alegandron's coin but with a different reverse:

    Tranquillina Deultum.jpg
    Tranquillina AD 241-244
    Roman provincial Æ 24.1 mm, 8.06 g
    Thrace, Deultum, AD 241-244
    Obv: SAB TRANQVILLINA AVG, diademed and draped bust, right
    Rev: COL FL PAC DEVLT, Marsyas as Silenus facing right, carrying wine skin over left shoulder and raising right arm
    Refs: Moushmov 3757; Youroukova 425, 4/II; cf. SNG Cop 549.
     
  20. lrbguy

    lrbguy Well-Known Member

    By means of Provincial coinage only can I provide her portrait in silver with a drachm from Caesaria in Cappadocia:


    Draped bust right; CABINV TPANKVLLIANE (read SABINU TRANQUILLIANE)

    Mt. Argaeus; pellet to upper right, MHTPO KAIC B N ? // ET E; (date = Regnal Year 5) in exergue. (E=epsilon)
    [​IMG]


    AE25 Anchialos
    Gordian III and Tranquillina face to face, [...]ANT GOPDIANO KAI CEB TPANKVL/ LINA

    Diana with bow in l hand and patera in outstreched r hand. Stag l at feet.
    OVLPIANWN AGXIALEIN (=Anchialos)
    [​IMG]

    I'm not sure about the denomination for this coin, but it is not as large as the typical Pentassarion. It could be a Tetrassarion. But I just love the way the stag is represented.
     
  21. Valentinian

    Valentinian Well-Known Member

    @Irbguy showed you can find Gordian III and Tranquillina together on a coin. Balkan cities in the era often have busts vis-a-vis. Here are Gordian III and Tranquillina together on coins of Mesopotamia including Singara (the mint city of the OP coin) and Nisibis.

    GordianII&TatSingara.jpg
    Large at 33-30 mm. Busts of Gordian III and Tranquillina face to face.
    Greek legend:
    AVTOK K M ANT ΓOPΔIANON CAB TPANKVΛΛINACEB
    Tyche seated left on rocks, centaur (Sagittarius) left above, (tiny) river god swimming at her feet left
    AVPCEHK OΛ CINΓAPA (Singara)
    BMC 8. Sear Greek Imperial 3804

    GordianIII&TatNisibis.jpg

    Large at 32 mm. Busts of Gordian III and Tranquilina face to face.
    Greek legend:
    AVTOK K M AN ΓOPΔIANON CAB TPANKVΛΛINA CEB
    Tyche seated left on rocks, centaur (Sagittarius) left above, river god swimming at her feet left
    CEΠ KOΛ O NECIBI MHTPO (Nisibis, Metropolis)

    I recently bought an e-book entitled "The Nisibis War: The Defense of the Roman East, AD 337-363." I am not done with it yet, but it seems very good and at $1.23 on Amazon it is a bargain.
     
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