Islands off Attica, Aegina AR Stater...
I must agree with Martin here... There's a whole serie of these fakes, most of them characterised by the hairstyle (similar to this one)... There...
Sicily, Syracuse AR Tetradrachm...
Lucania, Poseidonia AR Nomos...
Calabria, Tarentum AR Nomos...
Calabria, Taras AR Nomos...
No problem guys, if I can be of any help... [IMG] :D
Well, as far as I can say this one should be 340-320 BC, but based only on [credible] online attributions. Not sure where they take it...
Yea, yea, I'm here... Will see what I can find in a few minutes... Great coin Anoob :hail:
Looks like this... http://www.mcsearch.info/record.html?id=807254
That's a very nice sculpture Eng ! I wouln't even start trying to outline an opinion as to where and when it was made (I get it that it isn't...
I got this worn and holed Trebonianus Gallus sestertius that I bought at the beginnings of my [ancients] collecting days. Thought it would be...
The sky (and my budget) is the limit :smile The only thing that prevent me from spending 5-10000$ on an ancient coin is that I do not have...
If it worth that much to you, we could have a talk :biggrin:
If you want some (3-4), I think I got some extra (bought these in bulk when I collected minerals :nerd:).
Mine does not look too fragile, but I wouldn't put it in a flip. It is stored in a small metal container (specifically for "collectors items")...
Yes, what I meant was that part of the cartouche on the BM example seems to be visible at the bottom, the rest of it being rather worned out. But...
The size of my bug is 14 X 11 mm and the dating is 600 BC (according to the dealer). No additional details... The cartouche seems to be visible...
Not much... the only other meaning, other than phonetic, that I've found for the lasso is "endure"...
It looks as if it was part of the scarab (many have this "rim" near the edge) rather than the inscription, but it's possible (??).
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