What is your oldest coin ?

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by offa the saxon, Aug 6, 2020.

  1. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    [​IMG]
    KINGS OF LYDIA, temp. Ardys - Alyattes
    c. 630s-564/53 BCE (dates from a CNG listing of a similar coin)
    Electrum trite, 4.8 gm, 13.4 mm. Sardes mint.
    Obv: head of roaring lion right, sun with four rays on forehead
    Rev: two incuse square punches
    Ref: Weidauer Group XV, 64; BMC 2 (I do not have these books and cannot verify)
     
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  3. Justin Lee

    Justin Lee I learn by doing

    I love these! Nice retrograde E!

    I have a star...
    [​IMG]

    And retrograde K...
    [​IMG]
     
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  4. FitzNigel

    FitzNigel Medievalist

    My earliest is also a siglos:
    Anc-04-PA-fbe-Darius I-SIG-Sardes-3428.jpg Persian Empire
    Darius I to Xerxes II, r. 485-420 B.C.
    Sardes Mint, AR Siglos, 15.87mm x 5.6 grams
    Obv.: King running right holding spear and bow
    Rev.: Incuse punch; Ref.: SGCV 3428, Carradice Type IIIb, Group A/B (pl. XII, 17)
     
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  5. robinjojo

    robinjojo Well-Known Member

    Those are nice antique ivory carvings.

    Here's a sleeping Buddha Japanese netsuke carved from mammoth ivory, based on the grain pattern under magnification, that I think dates to the early 20th century - nicely done by an accomplished artist.

    August 6th is the 75th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan.


    D-Camera Sleeping Buddha, Antique Ivory Netsuke.jpg
     
    Last edited: Aug 7, 2020
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  6. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan Eclectic & Eccentric Moderator

    This is presently my oldest coin.

    Greece (Ionia, Phokaia): electrum hekte, ca. 478-387 BC
    [​IMG]
    Grade: NGC VF; Strike 5/5, Surface 3/5.
     
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  7. tibor

    tibor Supporter! Supporter

    @lordmarcovan Wow!! Such a remarkable state of preservation after
    2400+ years. The detail of the coin is wonderful. I need to broaden my
    collecting boundries. Thanks for sharing!!
     
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  8. Spaniard

    Spaniard Well-Known Member

    Some great coins!......Here's my oldest...
    Ionia, Phokaia, c. 350-300 BC. Æ (15mm, 4.36g, 11h). Phokleon, magistrate.
    Obverse..Head of Hermes facing left wearing a Petasos hat tied at the back.
    Reverse..Forepart of a griffin springing left. ΦΩKAEΩN (PHOKAEON), name of the magistrate below.
    SNG Copenhagen 1039ff (magistrate); BMC 101.
    hermes black.jpg
     
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  9. Finn235

    Finn235 Well-Known Member

    The dates thrown around regarding the "oldest" coin often have a margin of error of about a century. I've also heard claims that some of the oldest Chinese coin types (ant nose/ghost face, spades and knives) precede the Lydian electrum by centuries.

    Here are some of my oldest

    Lydia, Croesus AR 1/2 Croesid (Siglos) 560-546 BC
    20190115_Lydia-croesus-siglos.jpg

    Roughly contemporaneous are the most archaic Kyzikos silvers
    Archaic kyzikos obol fish head.jpg Kyzikos archaic obol tunny.jpg Kyzikos archaic obol tuna fish.jpg 20180529_Kyzikos-obol-rooster-tunny.jpg

    Some claim that the bent bar Shatamana of Gandhara in India are equally old, although this one is probably more along the lines of 450-400 BC
    20170816_2017-08-16-10.16.33.jpg 20170816_2017-08-16-10.16.49.jpg
     
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  10. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    My coin is just "a youngster" compared to what the others have posted.

    A Roman Republic Quadrigatus 225 to 215 BC.

    Roman Quad.jpg
     
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  11. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

    I can't go that far. My current oldest was a gift from Secret Santa last year :

    [​IMG]
    Bruttium, Terina, ca 420-400 BCE
    Third nomos
    Head of Terina right
    Nike seated left, holding bird
    1,97 gr - 15,5 mm

    Q
     
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  12. Alegandron

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

    Youngster, Yeah, but these are just AWESOME coins, struck at the nadir of the Roman Republic!

    upload_2020-8-7_17-12-6.png
    RR Anon AR Heavy Denarius -Quadrigatus - Didrachm 225-215 BCE Incuse Roma Janus Jupiter Cr 28-3 S 31

    upload_2020-8-7_17-12-49.png
    RR Anon AR Heavy Denarius Quadrigatus Didrachm 215-213 Janus Roma Relief tablet S 32 Cr 28-3

    upload_2020-8-7_17-13-23.png
    RR 225-214 BCE Anon BILLON Heavy Denarius Quadrigatus-Janus Didrachm Janus-Jupiter gallopng quadriga r 18.2mm 4-1g Cr 28-3 S 33


    upload_2020-8-7_17-14-6.png
    RR Anon AR Heavy Quinarius Half-Quadrigatus Drachm 216-214 BCE Janus ROMA Jupiter Victory Quadriga LEFT Cr 29-4 S 35

    upload_2020-8-7_17-14-46.png
    RR Anon AR Heavy Quinarius Drachm Half-Quadrigatus 225-212 BCE 3.1g 18mm Janus Jupiter in Quadriga L Victory ROMA Cr 28-4 S 35 SCARCE
     
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  13. Numisnewbiest

    Numisnewbiest Well-Known Member

    This is so much easier when you only have one :woot:

    DSC04120a.JPG
    Vespasian AE Dupondius, 71 AD, IMP CAES VESPASIAN AVG COS III, radiate head right / CONCORDIA AVGVSTI, Concordia seated left, holding patera and cornucopia, SC in exergue, RIC 266, Sear 2345, Cohen 624
     
  14. DonnaML

    DonnaML Well-Known Member

    Since the question was about coins -- not older human-made artifacts, or fossils! -- I'll say that it's probably this one:

    Mysia, Kyzikos, AR Diobol, ca. 450-400 BCE. Obv. Forepart of boar left; to right, tunny upwards. Rev. Head of roaring lion left within incuse square. Seaby 3846 [Sear, David, Greek Coins and their Values, Vol. 2: Asia & Africa (Seaby 1979)]; Von Fritze II, Group II, No. 9 (p. 36) [Von Fritze, H., "Die Silberprägung von Kyzikos" in Nomisma IX (1914), at pp. 34 - 56]; BMC 15 Mysia 108-113 [Wroth, Warwick, A Catalog of the Greek Coins in the British Museum, Vol. 15, Mysia (London, 1892) at pp. 34-35]; SNG BnF 361-366 [Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum, France, Cabinet des Médailles, Bibliothéque Nationale, Vol. 5, Mysia (Paris 2001)]. 10 mm., 1.22 g., 6 h.

    Mysia, Kyzikos, Boar-Lion diobol, jpg version.jpg
     
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