Reference. unpublished obverse of Sabina reverse Hadrian RIC 390; Rev. RIC 276 Obv. SABINA AVGVSTA Diademed and draped bust right Rev. TELLVS STABIL Tellus standing left, holding plough-handle and rake, two corn ears behind. 2.73 gr 19 mm 6h edit Note. Ex Gorny & Mosch, Auction 233, lot 2366 2015
some Sabina's Rome minted look like Hadrian with long hear. this is my https://www.cointalk.com/threads/ancients-post-your-hadrians.236881/page-41#post-3103536 1e Rome minted happy man here
This is the only one I have ever owned ... so far. It cost me $89 USD a decade ago. I probably couldn't find one in that price range today, let alone a decent one. (Going off to check VCoins to satisfy my curiosity on that., now.) (Update - seems it can still be done.)
That's a really interesting find, @Okidoki ! I've never seen a mule of Sabina before. Do you know anything about its provenance?
I don't think that's just a mule. The obverse is oddly engraved with a similar non-standard reverse. The house suggested it may be an unofficial imitation. I think it's an unofficial hybrid and chose to pass, but I'm glad somebody here got it.
it is eastern mint, and there they mixed two obverse and reverses so mule. the BM made it eastern (this coin), both a hybrid can not be, that are two sides of different rules, a mule is of same ruler. officially easterns can not be mule, so i have it in my easter minted collection of hadrian http://www.forumancientcoins.com/gallery/thumbnails.php?album=5768 Mule are here posted http://www.forumancientcoins.com/gallery/thumbnails.php?album=5997 Best, Eric
I'm confused. In the Gorny & Mosch lot description from 2015 (sale 233, lot 2366) they call it a hybrid and a contemporary imitation. (RRR! Hybride Prägung! Zeitgenössische Imitation!). In the Roma auction just completed they note, "Contemporary Imitation (?)" Neither of those descriptions mention the British Museum. May I ask, where did the BM "make it eastern?" This coin does not appear in their collection online, which only displays one denarius from an eastern mint, out of 70 denarii shown. In that case the hair style is in the early fashion for Sabina, like that of Matidia, and Hadrian is on the obverse. Stylistically this obverse and that reverse are not similar. Is there another reference for this coin someplace?
an interesting piece here another eastern mint on RIC 276 http://numismatics.org/ocre/id/ric.2.hdn.276c
Very nice coin @Okidoki ! The Tellus reverse with plow and rake is very nice. I really like that agrarian style. I only have one Sabina. I BELIEVE this is a likeness of her, and not Hadrian with a wig! RI Sabina 117-137 Denarius 3-18g Venus standing right holding an apple RSC73
Once again, I'm not understanding something here. To illustrate another coin from an eastern mint you linked us to a page for a coin in which it states on the page that the mint was Rome. " Typological Description Date Range From Date: AD 134 To Date: AD 138 Object Type: Coin Manufacture: Struck Denomination: Denarius Material: Silver Authority Authority: Hadrian Geographic Mint: Rome Region: Italy So what makes it "eastern?" Is it the use of the TELLVS STABIL reverse type? Returning to the Sabina: Did your informant at the BM have more to say than "interesting?" It is interesting at a number of levels, but I'm not sure an eastern origin is one of them. Could be, of course, but can't say without a good basis.