I've loved reading 'top tens' for the past couple of years, but this is my first contribution. I think I'll always be a generalist, but this year I've started to focus more on the Severans. Overall I've had a low win-rate this year, particularly in the first half. I didn't win any Republicans at all, and lost out on quite a few provincials that I really wanted. But I'm delighted with the coins I have won, even if I paid a couple of steep prices. I've got a few coherent themes now, and next year I should be able to complete some 'sets'. My wish-list is now out of control, but more than half of my purchases have been things that have just caught my eye. Comments and criticism would be greatly appreciated. I've learned a lot here, but mainly I've learned how little I still know! These are the coins I have 'in hand', but I have a couple of other wins that I'm very excited about, but doubt they'll arrive this year. And in any case, I had more than enough for a top ten. 10 One of the appealing aspects of Severan coinage is the variety of female portraits (and fantastic female characters). I love the portrait on this Julia Soaemias, and the Juno reverse is also well-preserved. 9 I only have a few later Roman coins, but I saw this Severina on a dealer's tray and had to have it. It's a really fine portrait. Next year I want to expand my collection of later Roman coins, to give poor Severina some company. 8 This is the probably the worst-looking coin I bought, but it's a fascinating type that I first heard about here. It's an ancient Indian imitation of a Tiberius Tribute Penny. It's not very pretty, but I love the history, the record of ancient trade routes and cultural exchange. 7 Annia Faustina is the rarest of the Severans. There's a single type of sestertius and one type of denarius from the Rome mint, both very rare and costly. Alexandrians are more attainable. This billon tet with Serapis gives me the rarest Severan portrait. 6 This Antoninus Pius Ae19 Necopolis ad Istrum appealed to me because of the excellent depiction of the Apollo Sauroktonos ('Lizard Slayer'), a celebrated ancient Greek sculpture. This one deserves a fuller write-up and its own post, to follow... 5 This coin really cried out to me when I saw it in an auction listing, and I thought I'd have to pay much more for it. Caracalla with Asclepius facing forward and his little helper Telesphorus. Really nice, unusual reverse. 4 Here's something to inspire envy. How many of you have a depiction of Herakles Slaying the Nemean Bunny Rabbit? A rare scene. This ticks all the boxes for me. I've been looking for attractive and unusual provincials. I like animals on coins. And it's a Severan emperor. It's an Ae32 of Caracalla from Blaundos. 3 This is one of the most interesting Severan reverse types: Elegabalus bringing the holy stone of Emesa to Rome. The stone was probably a meteorite. The coin looks better in hand. Some day I'll buy an upgrade in gold! 2 A centrepiece for my Severan collection: Septimius Severus with kids, the rival siblings Geta and Caracalla. It's a scarce type in nice condition, and it's the one coin that best represents the dynasty. I can't imagine a coin like this being anything other than number one in any other year, but in 2018 it was upstaged by......... 1 One of the greatest Greek coins: a Corinthian stater with the Mask of Silenus. It's a magnificent artist achievement, a wonderful contrast in characterisation between Athena, goddess of wisdom and courage, and Silenus the drunken follower of Dionysus. I've always been torn between those two myself!
Great coins @Nerva A lot of beauties. And wow the Mask of Silenus looks amazing on that beautiful stater. My top 3 of your coins are equal to your top 3.
Nice coins all. My favorite is your #2 with Geta and Caracalla reverse, but it's very close to your #1, the Corinthian stater with Silenus and #. Good year for you. Congrats.
Terrific list! I can't argue at all with your Top 3. I have a weakness for Colts, and the Mask of Silenus control symbol is surely the best one to have for Corinth. My number 2 last year was the Domna version of your dynastic type, and I'd love to have a matching Septimius some day... yours is excellent! Number 3 is on my perpetual want list, and likewise a coin of Annia Faustina and a Apollo Sauroktonos reverse. It looks like you had a great coin year.
It’s hard to prefer a coin over that magnificent stater, but the Stone of Emesa is a pretty fascinating type and one I’d love to add to my collection someday.
WOW, what a fantastic year! Your Julia Soaemias portrait is outstanding, as is the coin overall. Pretty darn good for spot #10 . The Annia Faustina... I'm trying to be happy for you but mostly I'm just jealous . The A-Pi Lizard Slayer... nice!! The facing Asclepius, the Nemean Bunny, the Sacred Stone, the dynastic Severan... all winners. Your #1 pick was my first ancient coin, or rather the first ancient coin purchase that wasn't an "uncleaned" coin or wasn't purchased with the intention of giving it to someone else. This variety with Silenus control mark was selected by HJB as the representative type in his book, 100 Greatest Ancient Coins. Corinth stater are #23 in the book. CORINTHIA, Corinth 345-307 BCE AR stater, 8.65 gm Obv Pegasus flying left, qoppa below Rev: helmeted head of Athena left wearing necklace; mask of Silenus behind Ref: Ravel 1046. Calciati 408. Scarce variety. from Heritage Auctions, June 2013
What a wonderful list! I am actively pursuing some of those (Annia Faustina, Indo-Roman Tiberius, stone of Emesa, nice style Corinth stater - you sure nailed it with that one!), while others are now added to my list or make me yearn for an upgrade... particularly that Soaemias portrait, wow! I'm so glad you decided to do a top 10 this year!
Wow, man...! Speechless! This Septimius denarius is fabulous, but the Corinthian stater have an amazing eye appeal!
I love them all. I'm partial to Severans for the reason you describe. It's very difficult to find a good portrait of Soaemias, and even more difficult to find it paired with a well-preserved reverse. Yours is one of the best I've seen.
Hard to argue with your top 5! The Corinthian stater, the Severan dynastic denarius, and the Elagabalus 'stone' denarius are my top picks. It looks like you had a very good year!
That stater is a beauty and what a contrast to the Romans. The killer bunny slayer is from that Monte Python movie- Life of Bryan I think? Great coins