Left to right, up and down: Constans, Constans, Gordian III (roman provincial from Nikea) and Constantius II.
This kind of little things brightens your day. Whatever that is, nice catch! ;)
What an excellent collection you are gathering, hope you complete this set someday! Good luck!
Perhaps this is the answer. This coin belonged to an old friend who inherited most of his ancients from his grandfather, a numismatist who helped...
Hi there! From time to time, you stumble upon a coin which has a "residual silvering" on its surface...may be if you are lucky, even a full...
There is no bull or ox in your coin. Just look at David´s positioning of the photo, can you see the standing emperor with a scepter? You have to...
Looks like a Constans II follis, you should check that up
Not rare, nor valuable. Just a nice example of a coin.
Nice detectivesque work!
I think it is Constantius II, Gallus has bare head and it doesn´t seem to be the case here.
It´s rotated, should be 45º to the left. It´s a byzantine pentanummi (Big E), 2nd. office (B).
Yes, solidus as Orielensis says.
It´s a tourist replica, I am afraid. Sorry.
Bolivia didn´t exist by 1776, it was a province in spanish territory called "Alto Perú". In fact, its modern name, "Bolivia" comes from its...
IMP SEV ALE....XAND AVG
Welcome, Macrianus! Nice example you got there! I still found it hard to tell apart those LRBs.:sorry:
Sometime ago, a bunch of 5 and 10 Falkland Pounds banknotes were found in the vaults of the Banco Central de la República Argentina. They only...
Looks OK, just a little worn.
Then may be it´s a fifth century nummus. Just guessing here...
Could be...what is its weight and measure?
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