I got myself a budget Caligula for my 12 Caesars collection

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Mr.MonkeySwag96, Sep 9, 2022.

  1. robinjojo

    robinjojo Well-Known Member

    Really nice examples posted!

    David@PCC, that's a particularly nice coin!

    Here's a somewhat rough Caligula AE as from a group lot from an Israeli dealer last year.

    Caligula, AE as, Vesta, 37-38 AD.
    10.25 grams


    D-Camera Caligula AE as Vesta 37-38 AD 10.25 grams eBay 1-23-22.jpg

    In 1991 I was fortunate to acquire a much nicer example from a local coin dealer.

    13.0 grams

    D-Camera Caligula, AE as, Vesta, 37-38 AD, 13.0 grams, Austin 6-91, 12-4-20.jpg
     
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  3. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

  4. kevin McGonigal

    kevin McGonigal Well-Known Member

    If I might offer a suggestion. The Spanish mints were still turning out As sized coins of the early emperors. Though the celator work is not quite up to fine work of the Rome mint the coins inscriptions are in Latin and the prices charged are quite a bit less than for the Rome mint examples. Sometimes they are found and listed as Roman Provincials but however listed one can get a pretty good image of Caligula from these Spanish mint bronzes.
     
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  5. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    I posted one, if you go back and look in this thread.
     
  6. ArnAdigard

    ArnAdigard New Member

    Can you guys give me your feeling about mine ?

    [​IMG]
     
  7. ArnAdigard

    ArnAdigard New Member

  8. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter


    That is a nice coin, but the portrait is of Germanicus (Caligula's father), not Caligula himself.
     
  9. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    That’s a lovely coin of Germanicus. Has the reverse field been smoothed? Great eye appeal.
     
  10. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    I’m late to the Caligula party. And that guy could throw a party. I saw the movie.

    Anyway, I have two Caligulae. At some point I would like to sell both and invest in a single Caligula in a better grade.

    The bottom coin was purchased as an unsold lot from Artemide. Someone raised an eyebrow at the sharpness of the word VESTA on the reverse. Another speculated that the coin might’ve had a thick patina that someone has removed. I don’t think the work constitutes “tooling,” but it’s possible this coin has had some “work done.” I’m still not sure. The dealer did not note any concerns. I did like the bold lettering, especially on the obverse.

    A5736167-B31F-4837-BC79-7EBA051777A2.jpeg
     
  11. Cherd

    Cherd Junior Member Supporter

    Speak of the devil, I managed to snag an Otho tonight. Football helmet headed and all :happy: Just Augustus and Claudius to go!

    upload_2022-10-23_22-57-39.png
     
  12. ArnAdigard

    ArnAdigard New Member

    I know but since it was struck under Caligula, i felt like sharing it. i thought it was not really off-topic.
    So basically, the fact the coin mentions Germanicus is some kind of tribute to his father , right ?

    Here is the full description :
    Germanicus AD 37-41. Rome
    As Æ
    29 mm, 11,34 g
    GERMANICVS CAESAR TI AVGVST F DIVI AVG N, bare head left / C CAESAR AVG GERMANICVS PON M TR POT, large S•C in field.
    RIC² 35 (Caligula).
     
  13. ArnAdigard

    ArnAdigard New Member

    I really paid attention to that in the description before bidding and it did not mention smoothing in the description at least. But i'm no expert. I hope everything is original. The auction house looked trustworthy.
    (you can find the full description in the post above).

    At least, the coin is really really beautiful.
    Feel free to share your opinion in case you find something suspicious!
     
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  14. ArnAdigard

    ArnAdigard New Member

    The coin is really beautiful! Nowadays it's probably worth a large sum of money.
     
  15. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

  16. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

  17. Limes

    Limes Well-Known Member

    Nice catch!

    6.1.png

    6.2.png
     
  18. Gallienus

    Gallienus coinsandhistory.com

    Actually, one of the 1st Ancients I bought after finishing graduate school in 1988 and I began collecting in earnest.

    It's a sestertius, the AD LOCVT{O?} COH{ORTVM} type which Caligula issued on 2 occasions. This is his 1st issue of 37-38 AD: his ascension year and shows him on the back addressing not a legion but a Cohort i.e. 420 men (wiki). The 2nd type, more famous but nearly identical, is the issue of 41AD made for his failed invasion of Britannia. I think this is one of the 1st types to leave off the "SC" on a bronze.

    Rome_Caligula_sest_both.jpg

    Of course I've always wanted to upgrade it to get a much better one and after receiving a really lowball offer from a dealer ($1200), decided to wait to acquire my nicer one before getting rid of this one. Of course, really nice Caligula sestersii have gotten very expensive as of late so unless I can find some of that missing 26 Bn in cryptocurrency, this will have to wait.
     

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