Coins that have a "Roman" look to them

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by panzerman, Nov 7, 2020.

  1. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Here both the Duke and the reverse remind one of Imperial Roman coin designs.
    I just picked this one up in Heritage auction.

    AV Quadrupla (2 Doppie d'oro) 1595 Parma Mint
    Postumus Issue: Depicts Alessandro Farnese/ Duke of Parma
    Struck in 1595 after his son Ranuccio Farnese became Duke
    Italian States/ Piacenza
    Alessandro Farnese was Philip II's Commander in Chief in the Flanders fighting Dutch insurgents. Had the Spanish Armada been able to destroy the Royal Navy, Farnese would have launced the Spanish invasion of England. Please add your modern Roman coins. lf (1).jpg lf (2).jpg
     
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  3. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    Nice, great to see unusual gold coins for sure! :D
     
    panzerman likes this.
  4. happy_collector

    happy_collector Well-Known Member

    Nice beautiful gold coin!
     
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  5. robinjojo

    robinjojo Well-Known Member

    That's a beautiful late Renaissance gold coin.

    Here's another "Roman" look of a scudo from the same period:

    Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, 1556-1598
    AR.Ducato, struck circa 1564-1571
    Philip II of Spain
    Naples Mint
    Obverse: PHILIPPVS REX ARAGON VTRI, bust right of Philip II, behind monogram GR above monogram VP.
    Reverse: HILA / RITAS / VNIVER / SA, within wreath.
    Ref:CNI XX pg.67.578.
    40.5 mm, 2 h.
    29.7 grams

    This coin was purchased in the early 1980's from a local coin dealer who specialized in Italian coins, especially Sicilian coinage.

    D-Camera  Philip II of Spain, scudo, Naples, 1564-1571,  29.7 g.  Sal 11-7-20.jpg


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  6. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    Neat. That reverse reminds me of the ole VOTIS ones.
     
    panzerman and +VGO.DVCKS like this.
  7. GregH

    GregH Well-Known Member

    The British milled coins especially from the 17th century onwards look very Roman-inspired to me. The legends are in Latin, not English, and the busts are often draped, the heads laureate. A tray I’m been working on:
    A759DC1D-F5A2-44F1-BC1C-7A3ADBF93E79.jpeg
     
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