Everything you ever wanted to know about Antonia

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Roman Collector, Jan 30, 2022.

  1. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Nico Kokkinos' Antonia Augusta: Portrait of a Great Roman Lady is worth obtaining for your library. While I have the older, hard-cover edition (1992), it is available in a newer, paperback edition (2002), which is described in one review as a "major rewrite," with an additional chapter.

    20220130_045213.jpg

    Unlike what one would expect from the title, the book is not simply a biography of the daughter of Marc Antony and Octavia, wife of Nero Claudius Drusus, and mother of Claudius, Germanicus and Livilla. It isn't a book focusing on her coins or portraits, either. Rather, it's an interdisciplinary review of everything we know about Antonia from many different sources: literary and historical, inscriptions, papyri, coins and tokens, sculpture, other arts, and architecture.

    Although only one chapter is devoted to her coins, it is a book that ancient coin collectors will want to read because it compiles all the various sources of information in a single volume.

    20220130_045120.jpg

    I have only one coin of Antonia, a dupondius issued under her son, Claudius.

    Antonia Dupondius.jpg
    Antonia, Augusta AD 37 and 41.
    Roman orichalcum dupondius, 12.10 gm, 28.3 mm.
    Rome, AD 41-50.
    Obv: ANTONIA AVGVSTA, bust of Antonia, draped and bare-headed right, hair in long plait.
    Rev: TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG P M TR P IMP S C, Claudius, veiled and togate, standing left, holding simpulum in right hand.
    Refs: RIC 92; BMC 166; Cohen Antonia 6; RCV 1902; CBN 143; Carson 405.

    I'd love to hear your thoughts about this book, about Antonia, and to see your coins of this interesting figure in Roman history!
     
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  3. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    Mine was purchased in 1987 from a brick and morter store in Alexandria, VA, graded VG-F. It appealed to me for the way it combined a red patina and yellow orichalcum.
    rb0980b00046lg.jpg
     
    Cinco71, Herodotus, Edessa and 17 others like this.
  4. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    I read a digital copy of it a long time ago when I got into ancients & enjoyed it.

    I was finding & reading whatever empress books I could get my digital hands on.

    My only one that has her.

    [​IMG]
    Claudius (41 - 54 A.D.)
    Egypt, Alexandria
    Billon Tetradrachm
    O: TI KLA[UDI KAIS SEBA GERMANI AUTOKR], laureate head of Claudius right; LB to right.
    R: ANTWNIA SEBASTH, draped bust of Antonia right, wearing hair in long plait.
    Dated RY 2 (41/2 AD)
    23mm
    11.62g
    Dattari 114; Milne 61-64; Emmett 73.
     
  5. gsimonel

    gsimonel Well-Known Member

    I pulled my beat-up old wreck out of a large batch of uncleaned coins many years ago:
    ClaudiaAntonia.jpg
    Bronze Dupondius
    Rome Mint, A.D. 41-50
    Obv: ANTONIA AVGVSTA
    Rev: TI CLAVDIVS CAES AVG P M TR P IMP - Claudius, veiled and togate, holding simpulum, facing left, between S and C
    RIC (Claudius) 92
    26mm, 10.3g.
     
  6. Parthicus

    Parthicus Well-Known Member

    I have a very well-worn but (I think) still decently attractive As of Antonia, with the usual reverse of her son Claudius:
    Antonia.jpg
     
  7. Ryro

    Ryro Trying to remove supporter status

    Sold! I'll have to find the updated 02 version.
    Here's my well used addition:
    share2041331307380957005.png
     
  8. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

    Mine has a nice patina imho:

    Antonia - Claudius new (2).jpg
     
  9. John Wright

    John Wright Well-Known Member

    05-M---Antonia   Dup 13'3.jpg My own Antonia ain't too great, but I love it.
     
    Edessa, Jay GT4, Spaniard and 8 others like this.
  10. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

    Mine, needs a better pic though

    0042-510.jpg
    Antonia, As - Restitution by Claudius
    ANTONIA AVGVSTA, bust of Antonia right
    TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG PM TRP IMP, Claudius standing left, holding simpulum. SC in field
    11,37 gr
    Ref : RCV #1902, Cohen #6

    Q
     
  11. DonnaML

    DonnaML Well-Known Member

    My only Antonia is an example of the same type that @Mat posted:

    Claudius I, billon [Sear]/AR [RPC] Tetradrachm, Year 2 [41/42 AD], Alexandria, Egypt Mint. Obv. Laureate head right, ΤΙ ΚΛΑVΔΙ ΚΑΙΣ ΣΕΒΑ ΓΕΡΜΑΝΙ ΑVΤΟΚΡ around, LΒ [Year 2] under chin / Rev. Draped bust of Antonia [Claudius’s mother] right, ΑΝΤΩΝΙΑ upwards to left, ΣΕΒΑΣΤΗ downwards to right. ); RPC [Roman Provincial Coinage] Vol. I 5117 (1992); RPC I Online at https://rpc.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/coins/1/5117; Emmett 73.2 [Emmett, Keith, Alexandrian Coins (Lodi, WI, 2001)]; Sear RCV I 1868 (ill.); Sear GIC 492 (ill.) [D. Sear, Greek Imperial Coins and their Values (1982)]; BMC 16 Alexandria 65 at p. 9 [Poole, Reginald Stuart, A Catalog of the Greek Coins in the British Museum, Vol. 16, Alexandria (London, 1892)]; K & G 12.3 [Kampmann, Ursula & Ganschow, Thomas, Die Münzen der römischen Münzstätte Alexandria (2008)]; Milne 61-64 at p. 3 [Milne, J.G., Catalogue of Alexandrian Coins (Oxford 1933, reprint with supplement by Colin M. Kraay, 1971)]; Dattari (Savio) 114 [Savio, A. ed., Catalogo completo della collezione Dattari Numi Augg. Alexandrini (Trieste, 2007)]. 24 mm., 11.25 g.

    [​IMG]
     
  12. Severus Alexander

    Severus Alexander find me at NumisForums

    Looks like a cool book! I'd be curious to know what (if anything) he has to say about my provincial issue from Thessalonica, issued under Caligula (RPC 1574):
    image00955.jpg

    I doubt this one is an official Roman mint product. Nice imitation, though, if that's what it is!
     
  13. GregH

    GregH Well-Known Member

    upload_2022-2-1_15-51-50.png

    Here's mine - a cheapish eBay purchase. I will upgrade one day.
     
    Last edited: Jan 31, 2022
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