Claudius AE coinage isn’t too shabby either

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by jamesicus, Mar 4, 2020.

  1. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member



    [​IMG]
    CLAUDIUS, SESTERTIUS, BMCRE Vol. I, Rome, No. 185, (Pl. 36.1)
    CLAUDIUS, SESTERTIUS, RIC Vol. I, Rome, No. 112
    (50-54AD, 36mm, 28.2gm)
    Obverse depiction: Claudius, laureate head facing right
    Inscription: TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG PM TRP IMP PP
    Reverse depiction: Civic Oak Wreath
    Inscription in four lines:
    EX SC
    P P
    OB CIVES
    SERVATOS
    (within Civic wreath)
    The senate proclaiming him “Father of the country” .(Pater Patriae) and distinguished servant of the people of Rome

    [​IMG]
    RIC Vol. I, CLAUDIUS, SESTERTIUS, Rome, No. 109, 42-43AD (38mm, 28.0gm)
    Obverse depiction: Nero Claudius Drusus, bare head facing left
    Inscription: NERO CLAVDIVS DRVSVS GERMANICVS IMP
    Reverse depiction: Claudius seated left on curule chair holding olive branch,
    weapons and armor below
    Inscription: TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG PM TRP IMP PP - S C (exergue)
    Nero Claudius Drusus was the father of Claudius
    Commemorating his father’s exploits on the northern Frontier


    [​IMG][​IMG]
    RIC Vol. I, CLAUDIUS, SESTERTIUS, Rome, No. 99 41-50 AD, (36mm, 25.3gm)

    Obverse depiction: Claudius, laureate head facing right
    Inscription clockwise from bottom: TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG PM TRP IMP
    Reverse depiction: Personification of Spes holding flower in right hand and demurely raising skirt with left hand
    Inscription clockwise from bottom: SPES AVGVSTA - S C (exergue)



    [​IMG]
    BMCRE Vol I, CLAUDIUS, As, Rome, No. 206 (Pl. 36.6)
    RIC Vol I, CLAUDIUS, As, Rome, No. 113
    (AD 50)
    Obverse: Claudius, bare headed facing left
    Inscription clockwise from bottom: TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG P M TR P IMP P P
    Reverse: Personification of Liberty, standing right, holding Pileus (Freedman’s cap) in right hand
    Inscription clockwise from bottom: LIBERTAS AVGVSTA | S -------- C (left and right)
     
    Last edited: Mar 4, 2020
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. rrdenarius

    rrdenarius non omnibus dormio

    three great coins, the differences in the reverses is interesting
     
  4. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

    Great coins James, thanks for sharing.

    P1180259bcmm (2).jpg Claudius as.jpg
     
  5. Gary R. Wilson

    Gary R. Wilson ODERINT, DUM METUANT — CALIGULA

    Very nice Jamesicus. Here's one I'm proud of: (formerly slabbed)

    Claudius_14-removebg-preview.png

    Claudius (Augustus)
    Coin: Brass Sestertius
    TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG P M TR P IMP P P - Laureate head right with NCAPR countermark behind head.
    NERO CLAVDIVS DRVSVS GERMAN IMP, S C - Arch of Nero Claudius Drusus: triumphal arch consisting of single arch & decorated piers set on raised base with four columns supporting ornate attic.
    Exergue:



    Mint: Rome (42AD)
    Wt./Size/Axis: 24.20g / 35mm / 180
    Rarity: Scarce
    References:
    RIC 114
    Cohen 48
    BMC 187
    Acquisition/Sale: shpadoinkle24 Ebay $0.00 8/17
    Notes: Jan 9, 19 - NCAPR Countermark

    The Gary R. Wilson Collection
     
  6. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    My apologies @rrdenarius - I “snuck” the As coin in via edit. Thank you.
     
    rrdenarius likes this.
  7. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

  8. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    Thanks Gary. Nice coin. Here is my specimen:

    CLAUDIUS TRIUMPHAL ARCH SESTERTIUS WITH NERO COUNTERMARK

    Evidently Nero also Countermarked and issued Claudius aes coinage in order to extend the supply of money in Britain after the death of Claudius.

    [​IMG][​IMG]

    BMCRE, Vol. I, CLAUDIUS, SESTERTIUS, Rome, No. 123, 41-45AD (35mm, 22.3gm)
    Obverse depiction: Claudius, laureate head facing right
    Inscription: TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG PM TRP IMP
    Countermarked NCAPR in oblong incuse rectangle behind head (unknown mark on head)
    Reverse depiction: Triumphal arch surmounted by equestrian statue of Nero Claudius Drusus
    Inscription: NERO CLAVDIVS DRVSVS GERMAN IMP

    Enlargement of NCAPR countermark:

    [​IMG]
     
    Marsyas Mike, Spaniard, TIF and 6 others like this.
  9. curtislclay

    curtislclay Well-Known Member

    Of Jamesicus' four bronzes, only the Drusus sestertius and the Claudius As are from the mint of Rome.

    Claudius Spes sestertius: Spanish mint, probably Tarraco, because of different legend style (particularly the Ms and Rs), and the dots before and after S C in rev. exergue. A large hoard of sestertii and dupondii all in this style was found near Tarraco in 1872 (Pobla de Mafumet Hoard).

    Claudius Wreath sestertius: Undetermined Thracian mint, perhaps end of reign in same issue with Britannicus, Agrippina II, and Nero Caesar sestertii, because of somewhat clumsy style and centration dimples on both sides.

    Laffranchi correctly separated the Tarraco mint and one other Spanish or Gallic mint from Rome in 1948, but unfortunately his discovery was ignored by Sutherland in his revised RIC I (1984) and by Giard in his Paris catalogue (1988), with the result that their only mint distinction for Claudius bronzes, as in the original RIC I and in Cohen, was between "Official (Mint of Rome)" and "Imitations". Von Kaenel in his monograph on Claudius (1986) followed Laffranchi in correctly separating out the Tarraco mint, but improbably regarded it as a branch mint in Rome commissioned by the government to assist in the production of bronze coins.
     
    Gary R. Wilson and DonnaML like this.
  10. Al Kowsky

    Al Kowsky Well-Known Member

    The coin pictured below is a thick & heavy as issued under Claudius from the mint in Antioch, Syria.
    Claudius, AD 41-54, MA 250c-1, As 25 mm, 18.45 gm (2).jpg
    Claudius, AD 41-54, AE as: 18.43 gm, 25 mm, 12 h. McAlee 250c/1, this coin. Ex Richard McAlee Collection.

    4390224.jpg
    Claudius, AD 41-54, AE Sestertius: 21.84 gm, 42 mm, NCAPR
    countermark applied during the reign of Vespasian. Ex Richard Baker Collection. Apparently many coins of Claudius were kept in circulation a long time due to a shortage of copper. Notice how light this coin is compared to the example posted by Jamesicus.
     
  11. svessien

    svessien Senior Member

    The portraits of Claudius are interesting. He is described many places as a weak man with his looks against him. On his coins he often looks strong, I think.

    Sear 1859 Claudius as.jpeg
     
  12. Gary R. Wilson

    Gary R. Wilson ODERINT, DUM METUANT — CALIGULA

    Very nice. I always like countermarked coins. It's just added history to the coin.
     
  13. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    Thank you Curtis - excellent information - as usual.
     
  14. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    This one turns out to be a wildwinds plate coin.

    Claudius (41-54 A.D.)

    AE19

    Attaleia, Pamphylia

    Obverse: Bare head of Claudius left

    Reverse: ATTAAEΩN, helmeted head of Athena right

    Attaleia mint

    4.4 grams

    Reference: Baydur 15, BMC 13 (plate 23,8) Istanbul museum collection 7726
    Ex-Heritage Auctions, Aug. 9, 2012.

    claudiusae19-1.jpg

    claudiusae19-2.jpg
     
  15. Gary R. Wilson

    Gary R. Wilson ODERINT, DUM METUANT — CALIGULA

    I think his likeness on the Aes coinage is just Imperial propaganda. It seems like you get a more accurate image from his gold and silver coins, similar to Caligula's coinage.
     
    svessien likes this.
  16. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    Nice coins, Al - excellent information - thanks.
     
  17. jb_depew

    jb_depew Well-Known Member

    Great coins, @jamesicus! I don't have any sestertii of Claudius to share, but I do have these:

    [​IMG]

    Claudius as, RIC 100. It has a unique style from what I typically see. I don't know if it alludes to a place of origin, or simply reflects the personal style of a celator.

    [​IMG]

    Claudius As, RIC 113
     
  18. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    Very nice nice coins, @jb_depew - thanks. If you are lucky, the illustrious Curtis Clay may shed some light on your RIC 100 As.
     
  19. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    Nice coin @svessien. That description of Claudius seems to fit me these days!:)
     
    svessien likes this.
  20. jamesicus

    jamesicus Well-Known Member

    Andres2 likes this.
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page