...and if you ever feel the need to part with your type II. I would humbly take it off your hands.
Both look ok to me, though I'm not an expert and own few Parthian types. The one in the flip appears to be suffering from a pvc/plastic related...
It seems a transitional/classical hoard was released to the market recently. I've been able to get 4 at reasonable prices; whereas I'm pretty sure...
@TIF I don't think I've ever seen you post one or see one on your website. Anything specific or just waiting for the right one?
I've been attempting to consolidate my Greek collection into higher end examples, whilst minimizing my duplicates. The coin below is my current...
Indeed.
Congratulations @Severus Alexander. I followed along. Thank you for researching 100 of my poorly labeled coins for your auction. Nothing like CT...
[ATTACH]
All obverses from the same die.
I have a few. I'm supposed to be offloading my lower end duplicates. Back when I said that, I had two with Pegasus... Can anyone tell what's...
Awesome seal. I have 2 from antiquity. [ATTACH] Red river stone seal. Near Eastern, Proto-Literate Period, circa 3500-3000 BC. Square stamp seal...
It looks like the Celator left room for it. [ATTACH] Edit* I didn't really think about it; but posting a photo like this, online, could be viewed...
I wonder if that includes the "all inclusive sulfur bath service." :rolleyes:
A 1/2 scale, modern copy of a Sicilian Dekadrachm.
Hadrian's heir and similar style. My only anepigraphic Roman Imperial. [IMG]
Reason for subtle snake on helmet and snakes on toga? Unless it's a hint at Athena turning Medusa into the snake haired monster.
You are correct. The "Delta Master" engraver, known for placing his Δ behind the ear on most of his dies, had also engraved early dies for Ptolemy...
I'm not sure if you'll get a strong opinion without a photo. It seems there are several examples, Cleopatra right / Eagle left, that have been...
The AD 1st century, Roman poet, Ovid, is the earliest, circa AD 9, source for the she-goat statue near the "image" of Vejovis. This translation...
The red Boscoreale toning is lovely. I think that's supposed to imply that the soil it was buried in was sulfur rich? Lovely coin in any event and...
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