with or without spam?
crosses were an extremely common motif at the time. there is nothing particularly templar about their use
sevaral years ago, I was asked whether the templars minted coins. they definitively did not. also, the hospitallers are a completely separate order
chinese coins began, according to some, around 1000 bc. indian coins began around 600 bc
with chinese coins from the tang dynasty onward, one need only concern oneself with the top and bottom characters which identify the reign title...
a portion of my coat of arms (the entire picture was too large) which is a winged chinese gold dragon holding a yin/yang symbol, blue background...
shouldn't its conquest by rome be 196 bc, not ad?
books on indian punchmark coins begin the series at around 600 bc. with china, I have seen dates for some of the boat and fish money as early as...
only certified stones from yap island will be recognised
why have a separate sheet for each series?
6th century bc? for what?
sevaral years ago, a few gold cash coins were offered for sale from the tang and ming dynaties. these were described as burial pieces. I have also...
they also minted a few gold coins used in burials of which I would like further information on thank-you
however, the mongols aren't ancient...
brennus... minor nit, but, is there any roman evidence for the name, or was that a mediaeval invention by geoffrey of monmouth?
there were a few coins minted shortly before the ptolemies
using a range of weights to assign a coin to a particular dynasty is fine. however, one should be accurate in the duration of that dynasty.......
a minor point: qin collapsed in 206 bc not 180
around 1400 in age. however, age does not correlate to cost
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