First off, I apologize for the somewhat blurry pics. But I was wondering if you guys could help me out in regards to rarity and value of these two coins, as I am all googled out after attributing them. Couldn't find any records of recent sales or listed as for sale on either one. RIC VI Thes 20b. RIC VII Alexandria 63.
Good job on correctly attributing them! You didn't even get tripped up on the Galerius. I would say $45-55 for the Galerius and $35-45 for the commemorative. What else did you get?
Of what I've attributed so far? Constantius II, RIC VIII 33 Tiberius II SB432 RIC VI 73b Justin II SB372 Something I labeled Antioch, 75-76AD, RPC I 4292 Venetian Andrea Dandolo Grosso, 1342-1354. (holed! ) Polish coin from 1624, Cat# 1624PL03350 Japanese 1 BU from 1837-1868. The other couple I'm working on include a large-ish silver Ptolemy, another large silver one, well worn, but looks like a Phoenician Tetradrachm, and, well, a whole bunch of small brass Romans, some Byzantines, etc. I should add I was only able to find one place where the Galerius is listed online... it's not rare or anything? Granted, the one other example I found is amazing condition, so... And the spreadsheet I used to figure out what the Roman commemorative was had it's rarity listed as R1, I just went back and looked at it. Good stuff.
I wouldn't call them additions, I'm attributing and selling them for my dad. 20% cut of everything...
Rarity does not equal value, remember that. Its only valuable if there are enough people are willing to pay good money for it. RPC I is an Antioch civic issue trichalkon, issued in AD 59/60. Double check non that one.
http://www.cngcoins.com/Coin.aspx?CoinID=111505 That thing is what I've got... in nowhere near as good shape, haha.
A few more attributions... Byzantine; Leo VI Follis; 866-912 AD; SB1729 Korea; Sangp'yong T'ongbo from the late Choson Dynasty Japan; New Kan'ei; Iron Japan; Old Kan'ei; 1667 and earlier Japan; 4 Mon (11 Wave) 1769 and later Japan; Ichibu; 1859-1868. Japan; Shin Nanryo Nishu-gin; 1824-1830. Yeah, I picked out the easy stuff.
The Kanei Tsuho aren't easy at all, if you do a complete job on them. Anything that has to be attributed by calligraphy style is hard. (But so rewarding!)
I was reading up on their attribution, but it was about 1:30 in the morning and I didn't really want to deal with that, haha... Might try attributing them tomorrow, if my day goes as planned.
Here's my two: Japan Ko-Kanei Tsuho type Mito mint, Hitachi prefecture 1 mon, 1635 AD Japan Emperor Sakuramachi Shin-Kanei Tsuho type Ashio-Dozan mint, Shimotsuke prefecture 1 mon, 1741 AD (Kanpo 1)
Very nice, mine are in similar condition. None of the japanese ones I partially attributed have markings on the reverse, though. The Korean one has 4 obverse marks, and 3 reverse marks, slightly different than the one I found and used for attribution, which was 4 obv, 2 rev. In other words, I half-assed the Korean. Definitely gonna work on those tomorrow.
What reference are you guys using with your ancient Japanese? I have a lot of them, (no markings on reverse), that look to me like Edo but I am not sure.
I just googled something up that explains the basic differences and has pictures and whatnot... forget what site it was now.