provincial coins

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by galba68, Dec 27, 2017.

  1. galba68

    galba68 Well-Known Member

    please, post pictures of provincial coins that you bought this year..or best of your provincial coins..unfortuntely, this one is not mine..
    upload_2017-12-27_20-54-0.jpeg
     
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  3. Alegandron

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

    For me, this is a DIFFICULT request.

    EMPIRE PROVINCIALS:

    I really do not collect Provincials! However, I did snare these due to their cool REVERSES:
    RProv AE18mm 4.3g Elagabalus CE  218-222 Thrace Philippolis Moushmov 5423.JPG
    RProv AE18mm 4.3g Elagabalus CE 218-222 Thrace Philippolis Moushmov 5423

    upload_2017-12-27_14-13-5.png
    RI Augustus 27BC-AD14 Æ20 5.5g 12h Apameia Phrygia Magistrate Attalos c 15BC Two corn-ears above maeander pattern RPC I, 3125 SCARCE


    REPUBLIC PROVINCIALS:

    upload_2017-12-27_14-17-15.png
    RR Roman Occupied Macedonia Gaius Publilius, Questor Amphipolis Mint As AE26 As ROMA Griffin MAKEDONWN TAMIOV GAIOV POPAILIOV oak wreath BC 148-146 SNG COP 1318

    upload_2017-12-27_14-17-55.png
    RR Macedon occupation Alexander - Club Coin chest Quaestor Chair wreath Aesillas Quaestor AR Tet Thessalonika Mint BC 90-70
     
  4. Mikey Zee

    Mikey Zee Delenda Est Carthago

    :rolleyes: WOW, the OP is gorgeous!! I wonder if anyone here has an example...

    Brian has superb examples posted just above:hungry:and here are a few I purchased that immediately come to mind---featuring the Emperors Geta, Elagabalus and Claudius/Nero.

    I just returned home with my new Toyota Corolla, so my newest coin purchases will be limited to one or two a month from now on and somehow that doesn't make me as sad as it normally would :D. My old Altima essentially 'died' on me at the dealership LOL

    Geta Thanatos.png elagabalus bronze assarion.jpg nero claudius bil tet FAC.JPG
     
  5. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

    My "all time fav" provincial coin!

    Gallienus Ae29 of Perge.jpg
    Gallienus of Perge, Pamphylia.
    A.D. 253-268
    Obverse: AVT KAI AV KAI PO LI GALLIHNO CEB, laureate and draped bust right, seen from behind; I (mark of value) before
    Rev: PERGAIWN, Elpis advancing left, holding flower and raising hem of skirt.
    SNG France 579 (same dies); SNG Copenhagen -; SNG von Aulock 4728 (same obv. die).
     
  6. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

    I'm Pleased with these 2 recent bought coins:

    P1200021.JPG
    Not shure if its an As or Dupondius weighing 17 gram P1180560.JPG

    My All time favourite:

    P1160606.JPG
     
  7. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    There are thousands of wonderful Provincials that trade at prices I will never afford and tens of thousands so 'ordinary' I am not tempted to buy. In the middle are the ones I am happy to own. This category includes:
    Coins of Alexandria. If I were honest I might say all my best 2017 coins were from Alexandria but for this thread I will show just one, a Septimius Severus tetradrachm with Serapis, to represent the city and the others I bought this year.
    pa1130fd3423.jpg

    This scrappy remnant of Caracalla's hate for Geta from Stratonicaea may be the ugliest coin I bought this year or, perhaps, the most beautiful if you choose to see it that way. I have posted it so many times here there is nothing gained by repeating the story.
    pm1418fd0061.jpg

    Not this year but recent is this bronze of Tomis by a young Caracalla. The dealer who provided it was a major supplier for my hobby over the last two decades and retired recently. As a parting gesture he showed me this coin an suggested I would appreciate it. I do. The reverse of this 4 assaria shows the Dioscuri reclining as if retired from their lives riding on the reverses of so many coins. I am fond of coins of Caracalla in his youth.
    pm1275fd3294.jpg

    This little Geta assarion of Nikopolis introduced me to the Apollo Sauroktonos reverse and has as clear a lizard on the tree trunk as any I have seen. Through a series of correspondences the coin introduced me to friends who understood the appeal of the coin while most would prefer proof sets.
    pm1460b01682lg.jpg

    Of the Roman emperors who issued Provincials, one of the most Prolific was Gordian III here shown representing all his coins with wife Tranquillina on a coin of Tomis with the denomination mark erased from the die leaving a raised mound on the reverse. I would love to find a coin of this die before the erasure to prove whether the erased letter was E=5 or Δϛ (ligate)=4 1/2.
    po2170b00157lg.jpg

    ...and last but not least is one of my several Augustus/Agrippa dupondii of Nemausis which I bought at the beginning of 2013 when the crocodile fanaticism overcame me. I have shown better ones but this one was special because it came from a friend and has great surfaces despite the uneven strike and wear.
    pb0045bb3018.jpg

    Unfortunately, it is not mine, either.
     
  8. gsimonel

    gsimonel Well-Known Member

    Here are three that I found in batches of uncleaned coins. This first one would have been a stunner if the green patina had stayed intact:
    [​IMG]
    Marcus Aurelius
    Caesar, A.D. 139-161
    Augustus, A.D. 161-180
    Provincial Bronze (AE26)
    Moesia Inferior, Nikopolis ad Istrum, before A.D. 161
    Obv: AVPHΛIOC OVHPOC KAICAP
    Rev: NEIKOΠOΛEITΩNΠPOC IC - Serapis, standing left, holding scepter and sacrificing with patera over altar.
    Unlisted in Moushmov or RPC; unpublished?
    26mm, 11.0g.

    I've always had a soft spot for the bull-and-lion coins from Viminacium. Here's two:
    [​IMG]
    Philip I ("the Arab")
    Augustus, A.D. 244-249
    Provincial Bronze (AE29)
    Moesia Superior, Viminacium, A.D. 247-248
    Obv: IMP M IVL PHILIPPVS AVG
    Rev: P M S C-OL VIM - Moesia standing between bull and lion
    ANVIIII in exergue
    Varbonov 138
    29mm, 14.3g.

    This last one I like because an imperial Hostilian is difficult, and usually expensive, to acquire, but can usually be found in a provincial:
    [​IMG]
    HostilianCaesar, A.D. 250(?)-251
    Augustus, A.D. 251
    Provincial Bronze (AE26)
    Moesia Superior, Viminacium
    Obv: C VAL HOST M QVINTVS C
    Rev: P M S COL VIM - Moesia, standing between bull and lion
    AN XII in exergue
    Moushmov 55
    25x27mm, 12.2g.
     
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  9. Pellinore

    Pellinore Well-Known Member

    Two years ago I joined CoinTalk. It has influenced my collection quite a lot: I focused more on Roman coinage, especially Provincial - because of the artistic quality of some and wild eccentricity of other coins. I love to virtually visit (with Google Earth) places in Turkey that once were thriving little Roman Greek towns, of which I happened to have acquired an interesting ancient object.

    This is my best (and most expensive) Roman provincial of 2017, an Alexandrian tetradrachm (22 mm, 13.89 gr.) of Gordian III, dated year 7 = 243/4. Gordian died in February 244 in or after a lost battle against the Persians near Ctesipon. On the reverse we see Tyche leaning left on a lectisternium, a dining couch imagining a banquet for the gods. It is one of the details of Roman imperial religion that's not so easy for me to understand.

    The rudder is an attribute of Tyche, and so it looks as if she is lazily rowing in an opened box. But probably the Egyptian Romans didn't see it that way.

    3278 Gordian lect.jpg
     
  10. Mikey Zee

    Mikey Zee Delenda Est Carthago

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  11. GerardV

    GerardV Well-Known Member

    33209689-DCCF-48AA-843F-6B69E975A689.jpeg

    A17DEF14-75DB-49CC-BAC4-04F6331F85CB.jpeg

    I believe this counts. When I get home I can post a few more.
     
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  12. dadams

    dadams Well-Known Member

    My last coin of 2017 is from the Roman Province of Syria :
    [​IMG]
    Philip I the Arab (244-249 AD)
    Æ 8 Assaria of Antioch, Seleucia and Pieria; 28.1mm, 12.175g, die axis 180o; 2nd issue, Antioch mint.
    Obv: ΑΥΤΟΚ Κ Μ ΙΟΥΛΙ ΦΙΛΙΠΠΟC CΕΒ - Laureate, draped, and cuirassed bust of Philip right, from behind.
    Rev: ANTIOΧEΩN MHTPO KOΛΩN - Towered, veiled, and draped bust of Tyche right, Δ-Є / S-C across fields, ram leaping right with head turned back above, star below.
    Ref.: McAlee 977; BMC 527
    Ex.: Lindgren from the Butte College Foundation
     
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  13. Pellinore

    Pellinore Well-Known Member

    That's a nice one, with the 'towered lady' and the visible details.

    One of my last coins of the year is this tiny provincial, a 13 mm Alexandrian dichalkon of Trajan, datable to 113/4. The reverse shows the mysterious hem-hem crown, pointing to a religious ritual. I love it when simple coins are in good condition.

    3115 Traj s 300.jpg
     
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  14. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    AUGUSTUS COLONY 1.jpg

    To be honest, this is the only coin I own that bothers me a little. I got it fairly cheap ($30) and it has crazy high relief. I've often wondered if it is fake, but I think I'm being paranoid. I don't have any other reason to suspect it, other than it just sort of feels off. But no casting seam. I think it feels off because I lack experience with provincials.

    Augustus
    12-14 A.D.
    AE 21 21 mm. 7.94 G. 0°

    IMP CAESAR AVGVSTVS; bare head right.
    COL IVL [COLONIA JULIA]; priest plowing with 2 oxen. Berytus was a colony founded by Julius Caesar. Present-day Beirut, Lebanon.
     
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  15. Pellinore

    Pellinore Well-Known Member

    Thanks for the compliment. Some of the coins on this acsearch link may not be yours, but they are mine. One of the best auctions of the year - for me.
     
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  16. Okidoki

    Okidoki Well-Known Member

    JUDAEA, Gaza. Hadrian AE 19 130-31 AD Heracles standing3 viewsReference.
    RPC III, 4021;

    Issue Year 2 = 191

    Obv. Α ΚΑ ΤΡ ΑΔΡΙΑΝ СƐ
    Laureate head right, drapery on left shoulder

    Rev. ΓΑΖΑ Β ΕΠΙ
    Heracles standing r., with club and lion-skin; to l., מ

    6.15 gr
    19 mm
    12h
    984P Hadrian RPC4021.JPG
     
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  17. Alegandron

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

    My last coin of the year is this one from the SteveX6 Collection:

    upload_2017-12-29_16-5-25.png
    RR Hd Juno Sospita R goat skin hddrss She-wolf R placing stick on fire eagle stndng fanning flames 45 BCE 19.0mm 4.07g Cr 472-1
     
  18. GerardV

    GerardV Well-Known Member

    Here is another and one of my favorite coins.


    Trajan,‭ ‬AD‭ ‬98-117.‭ ‬
    Æ19,‭ ‬5.3g,‭ ‬1h‭; ‬SYRIA,‭ ‬Seleucia Pieria.‭
    ‬Obv.:‭ ‬AVTOKΡ KAIC NEΡ TΡAIANOC AΡICT ΓEΡM ΔAK‭; ‬Laureate head right.‭
    ‬Rev.:‭ ‬СЄΛЄΥΚ ΠΙЄΡΙΑС‭; ‬Filleted thunderbolt set upon stool.‭
    ‬Reference:‭ ‬RPC III‭ ‬3785,‭ ‬BMC‭ ‬35.
    IMG_0155.JPG



    [​IMG]
     
  19. Gil-galad

    Gil-galad I AM SPARTACUS

    I have a few Roman Provincial coins as I have not purposefully went and purchased many of them. That's going to change in the future as I like them quite a bit.

    Herennius Etruscus-Syria.jpg

    Roman Provincial Antioch ad Orontem - Syria, Herennius Etruscus Caesar (250-251 AD) BI Tetradrachm

    Obverse: EPENN ETPOV ME KV ΔEKIOC KECAP, Barehead draped bust seen from behind three dots below.

    Reverse: ΔHMAPX EΞOVCIAC, SC, Eagle standing left head left, wings spread, standing on palm, wreath in beak.

    Reference: Mcalee 1153, Prieur 632

    Ex: Kayser-i Rum Numismatics +photo

    Philip-II-Adramytion-Tyche.jpg

    Roman Provincial Adramytion Mysia, Philip II (244-249 AD), AE

    Obverse: M IOVΛ ΦIΛIΠΠOC, Bareheaded, draped and cuirassed bust right.

    Reverse: ΕΠΙ CTP AVP ΦABIANOV + city, EITΩN, Tyche standing left, wearing mural crown, holding patera and cornucopia.

    Reference: Fritze Mysien 172, Kraft Systeme p.30 no.13, Waddington 629

    Ex: Kayser-i Rum Numismatics +photo

    macrinus.jpg

    Macrinus and Diadumenian AE27, 5 assaria of Markianopolis, Moesia Inferior, Magistrate: Consular Legate Pontius Furius Pontianus, 217-218 AD, 10.9g, 27mm

    OBV: AV K OΠEΛ CEVH MARKRINOC K M OΠEΛ ANTΩNEINOC, Dual confronting busts of Macrinus and Diadumenian. Macrinus laurate and cuirassed bust right, Diadumenian bareheaded and draped bust left.

    REV: YΠ ΠONTIANOY MAPKIANOΠOΛEITΩN, Bonus Eventus, head left, sacrificing from patera over altar, right hand holding branch, Epsilon field mark right.

    REF: Varbanov I 1153 var (obverse legend)

    augustus-agrippa-nemausus.jpg

    Augustus & Agrippa AE Dupondius. Nemausus Mint, 20-10 BC. 11.2g, 26mm

    OBV: IMP DIVI F, Back-to-back heads of Agrippa, wearing rostral crown, & Augustus, laureate.

    REV: COL-NEM, crocodile chained to palm, wreath with long ties trailing above.

    REF: RIC 155, Cohen 7, RPC 523, Sear (RCV 2000) 1730, aorta 580

    hostilian-viminacium.jpg

    Roman Provincial Hostillian, as Caesar, AE27 of Viminacium, Moesia Superior, 250-251 AD, 12.0g, 27mm

    OBV: C VAL HOST M QUINTVS CAE, Bare-headed, cuirassed bust right, paludamentum visible from rear.

    REV: PMS COL VIM, Moesia standing facing, head left, hands outstretched over a bull and a lion, AN XII in ex.

    REF: Moushmov 54, Martin 4.01.14

    Ex: Haik Ourfal

    gordian-3-reshoot-1.jpg

    Roman Provincial Edessa, Mesopotamia, Gordian III (238-244 AD) with Abgar X Phraates, AE24 apx

    Obverse: AVTOK K M ANT ΓOPΔIANOC CЄ, Radiate, draped and cuirassed bust right; star to right.

    Reverse: Rev: ABΓAPOC BACIΛЄVC, Draped bust of Abgar right, wearing tiara; star to left.

    Reference: BMC Arabia 144, SNG Copenhagen 225
     
  20. Ed Snible

    Ed Snible Well-Known Member

    I wish this coin was pleasing. I saw it online and passed on it. Then I saw it at the Whitman coin show in April. It looks even worse in hand than the picture. There is a filled-in hole! Yet at the show I couldn't resist it.

    I was disappointed because I had driven four hours to go to the show and couldn't find anything in my collecting area. I inspected this coin because it is a nice mythological type with Perseus. The coin is 36mm in diameter. That doesn't seem much bigger than typical 32mm coins ... but the surface area and weight of an AE36 is nearly 27% greater than an AE32. The coin is huge. Even with the strange surface it is interesting to look at and hold. It also has an unusual bust type, showing Gordian wielding a shield with Medusa on it.

    gordian-tarsos.jpg
    Cilicia, Tarsos, Gordian III (238-244 AD), Æ 36mm, 29.76g
    Obverse: ΑΥΤ ΚΑΙC Μ ΑΝΤ ΓΟΡΔΙΑΝΟC [CΕΒ] Π Π; Radiate and draped bust right, holding spear and shield, gorgonian and snakes on shield
    Reverse: ΤΑΡCΟΥ ΜΗΤΡΟΠΟΛΕΩC ΑΜΚ ΓΒ; Perseus standing left, holding statuette of Apollo Lykeios, harpe and Medusa head.
    Reference: SNG Levante 1133-4, SNG Paris 1710
     
  21. Smojo

    Smojo dreamliner

    That would consist of about 90% of my purchases of the year, so at a guess of around 34 provencials in 2017.
    I'll share a few now then more later
    .
    7cPvvInr-42511240.jpg
    LYDIA, Hierocaesarea. Pseudo-autonomous.
    Æ15, 2.0g, 6h; Time of Trajan-Hadrian, AD 98-138.
    Obv: ΠЄΡСΙΚΗ; Draped bust of Artemis Persica right, with quiver over shoulder and bow and arrow at breast.
    Rev: ΙЄΡΟΚΑΙСΑΡЄΩΝ; Lighted altar.
    Reference: RPC III 1856; SNG von Aulock 2952.

    Nero Acmoneia, Phrygia [RPC3174].jpg
    PHRYGIA. Acmoneia. Nero, AD 54-68.
    Æ19, 3.8g, 12h; c. AD 62; Lucius Servenius Capito, archon , with his wife Julia Severa.
    Obv: NEPON KAIΣAP ΣEBAΣTOΣ; Laureate head right; crescent before.
    Rev: ΣEPOYHNIOY KAΠITΩNOΣ KAI IOYLIAΣ ΣEOYHPAΣ AKMONEΩN;
    Zeus seated left, holding patera and scepter; EΠI APX above; to left, owl standing facing.
    Reference: RPC 3174
    SUvCaSn0-85761880.jpg

    Trajan, AD 98-117.
    Æ10, 8.6g, 12h. SYRIA, Cyrrhestica, Cyrrhus.
    Obv.: AVTOKP KAIC NEP TPAIANOS APIST CEB ΓEPM DAK ΠAΡΘI; Laureate head right.
    Rev.: KYPPHC/TWN in two lines; A below; all within wreath.
    Reference:Butcher 1; BMC 2; SNG Copenhagen 45 var. (B on reverse).


    This will get me started arleast. I have more to pile on later
     
    Last edited: Dec 30, 2017
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