The Worst Flans of the Ancient World

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by hotwheelsearl, Aug 4, 2020.

  1. DBDc80

    DBDc80 Numismatist

    This one isnt really the worst....but ive always thought it was struck oddly....

    Pakoros I ca. 78-120 A.D.
    AR Diobol
    Indeterminate mint (Persis)
    "New Parthian Coin Types" 1989
    Type 6 (pl. 42, 8)



    PSX_20200223_201855.jpg
     
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  3. Victor_Clark

    Victor_Clark all my best friends are dead Romans Dealer

    here's a coin from the National Archives of Georgia

    King George IV of Georgia, struck 1210 A.D.


    ლაშა-გიორგის_მონეტა_1210_წ..png



    and another example

    s-l1600.jpg
     
  4. Severus Alexander

    Severus Alexander find me at NumisForums

    +VGO.DVCKS and BenSi like this.
  5. TypeCoin971793

    TypeCoin971793 Just a random guy on the internet

  6. Macromius

    Macromius Well-Known Member

  7. Broucheion

    Broucheion Well-Known Member

    Hi All,

    Horrible flan, but nice portraits for such a late Ptolemaic from Cyrenaica.

    upload_2020-9-23_1-56-1.png

    - Broucheion
     
  8. +VGO.DVCKS

    +VGO.DVCKS Well-Known Member

    Solidness, @medoraman. I was thinking about posting my only 'wire denga,' bought for how it reminds you of the origin of the term, but as fat as this thread has gotten, that's looking more redundant all the time.
    ...Anyway, your point is well taken. Especially with medievals (can we include Byzantine? think so), it applies equally to flan and strike. ...Just Show Me an 11th-12th-c. Norman denier that Doesn't look like something only a mother could love.
    And thanks to @Macromius for reminding me to thank @hotwheelsearl for the thread.
     
    Last edited: Sep 23, 2020
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  9. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    I’m very glad so many folks have gotten enjoyment out of this thread! I certainly love seeing coins “only a mother could love!”
     
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  10. +VGO.DVCKS

    +VGO.DVCKS Well-Known Member

    ...Oh, heck. I guess it's a kopek, not a denga; late, anyway; Ivan the Terrible (1533-1584). Right, the obverse has the Tsarist and British martial patron saint, George, slaying the dragon.
    COINS, RUSSIA, IVAN, OBV..jpg COINS, RUSSIA, IVAN, REV..jpg
     
  11. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    The whole reason I bought this coin from a dealer in Berlin:

    [​IMG]

    This coin is a hemi litron from ca. 405-395 BCE. Curiously this is a cast piece, and the casting spur was never removed from the coin, making for a very dramatically formed coin which probably did not circulate for long, but may have been saved as a curiousity or perhaps never circulated at all. This piece has a portrait of Arethusa on the obverse and a dolphin and clam shell on the reverse.

    Edit to add - cannot get image to show.
     
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  12. Quant.Geek

    Quant.Geek Well-Known Member

    Fixed...:D
     
  13. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    I see no reason to call that a 'cast piece'. As with most coins, the blank was cast and then the design was stamped on it using a hammer and dies. It is unusual in that they did not clip off that extra piece of metal where the mold for the blank overflowed.

    My 'Widow's Mite' was a round die used on a square blank. These things were made at a breakneck pace so you find everything.
    ju0090bb1599.jpg

    Trimming off sprues between the blanks was too much extra work. If the cut was near the coin, we would have a rounder flan but when the cut was nearer the neighbor, you got handles. Evidence suggests they were struck while the strip of blanks was still attached and coins separated after striking. Note the one below shows a bit of the neighboring strike on the top sprue. The intention was for there to be a thin channel between coins but this one overflowed a bit so we see a deep central channel and a thinner overflow outside the channel. ju0110bb2546.jpg
    Occasionally you get a round one but that would be more luck than skill.
     
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  14. Bradley Trotter

    Bradley Trotter Well-Known Member

    Here is one of the antoniniani of Gallienus that I own. This particular specimen has an extremely ragged and uneven flan that made it somewhat difficult to attribute.

    Gallienus:
    Plated AE Antoninianus
    260 - 268 A.D.
    Obverse: GALLIENVS AVG, radiate cuirassed bust right.
    Reverse: SECVRIT AVG, Securitas standing left, leaning on column.
    Rome
    RIC 277

    Obverse:

    B22E02B0-BE50-44C2-9623-66BACDFCE415.jpeg

    Reverse:

    FC65688E-5A71-4F98-B200-4E993ED53AB3.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Sep 23, 2020
  15. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

  16. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    Pretty much a rectangle.
    Faustina I.jpg
     
  17. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

  18. Quant.Geek

    Quant.Geek Well-Known Member

    While Georgian coins takes the prize for their flans (its really an understatement as their flans are AMAZING!), here are some Byzantine coins that exhibit odd and messed up flans during the Twenty Years' Anarchy:

    Byzantine Empire: Tiberius III Apsimar (698-705) Æ Half Follis, Constantinople (Sear 1369; DOC II.13; MIB 76)

    Obv: Legend normally illegible or only fragmentary; Tiberius standing facing, wearing crown and military costume, and holding globus cruciger and long cross
    Rev: Large K between A/N/N/O and Δ; above, cross(?); beneath, officina letter Δ
    Dim: 3.7 g, 27 mm

    [​IMG]

    Byzantine Empire: Tiberius III Apsimar (698-705) Æ Follis, Constantinople (Sear 1367; DOC II.11)

    Obv: Emperor standing, wearing military garb, paludamentum, and crown with cross; In right hand, globus cruciger and in left, long cross
    Rev: Large M; cross above, to left, A/N/N/O; B below; CON in exergue
    Dim: 29 mm, 3.30g

    [​IMG]
     
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  19. Quant.Geek

    Quant.Geek Well-Known Member

    A few more wacky coins from the Twenty Years' Anarchy...

    Byzantine Empire: Tiberius III Apsimar (698-705) Æ Half Follis, Constantinople (Sear 1369; DOC II.13; MIB 76)

    Obv: Legend normally illegible or only fragmentary; Tiberius standing facing, wearing crown and military costume, and holding globus cruciger and long cross
    Rev: Large K between A/N/N/O and Δ; above, cross(?); beneath, officina letter Δ

    Overstruck on a half follis of Tiberius III (Sear 1368)

    [​IMG]


    Byzantine Empire: Leontius (695-698) Æ Half Follis, Constantinople (Sear 1335; DOC III.9; MIB III.33)

    Obv: Crowned facing bust of Leontius, holding globus cruciger; cross to right
    Rev: Large K; cross above, A/N/NO and A across fields, Γ below
    Dim: 20mm, 2.49g

    [​IMG]


    Byzantine Empire: Justinian II, 1st Reign (685-695) Æ Half Follis, Constantinople (Sear 1262; DOC 21; MIB 47)

    Obv: Crowned facing bust of Justinian, holding globus cruciger
    Rev: Large K; date across field; Γ below
    Dim: 22 mm, 2.6g

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Sep 25, 2020
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  20. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    I just picked up this Victorinus specifically for the absolute disgusting flan shape.
    21x17mm, with chunks taken out of it on the sides and a crack that started to form from the strike itself, I think.

    They really didn't even try on this one.
    Victorinus RIC Southern Mint 71.JPG
     
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  21. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    You got a good bust and a good reverse though.
     
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