Wishing your family health and vitality, @bcuda . Here are some healing deities! [IMG] Trebonianus Gallus, AD 251-253. Roman AR antoninianus,...
That's what you call the side eye! :eek: Here's one of mine from the Antioch mint: [IMG] Licinius I, AD 308-324. Roman billon follis, 3.43 g,...
Very desirable coin, @Mat ! I only have Diadumenian in provincial form: [IMG] Diadumenian, Caesar AD 217-218. Roman provincial Æ 16.5 mm, 4.63...
[ATTACH] Gordian III, AD 238-244. Roman provincial Æ tetrassarion, 9.53 g, 24.2 mm, 1 h. Thrace, Hadrianopolis, AD 238-244. Obv: AVT K M ANT...
Cool! Just a quick look found two of my coins. Not similar examples, but the actual coins! Gordian III provincial with Kabeiros within a temple:...
This issue probably refers to the birth of M. Annius Verus in 162.
Here's the sestertius version of your OP, @DonnaML : [IMG] Faustina II, AD 147-175. Roman orichalcum sestertius, 24.40 g, 30 mm, 12 h. Rome, AD...
Faustina III lived to adulthood and married a Consul, Gnaeus Claudius Severus, who later became a senator.
I have rephotographed this thing and have examined it with a good magnifier. I have convinced myself the reverse legend reads PIETATI AVG. The...
She became Augusta in AD 147. Strack argued that the FAVSTINA AVGVSTA issues with descriptive reverses commenced as early as 158, a judgement...
The TEMPOR FELIC issue of AD 161 includes the four older sisters (see above), all standing on the ground, in addition to Commodus and Titus...
No. That coin dates to 160, before Commodus and his brother were born. The children are thought to represent Faustina III and Lucilla (the older...
Hold out for one with a better reverse.
Something on the order of this: [ATTACH] Arcadius, AD 383-408 Roman Æ half-centenionalis; 1.15 g, 14.2 mm Cyzicus, AD 388-392 Obv: D N...
Here's a denarius of Faustina I struck over a previous issue. [IMG] Faustina Sr, AD 138-141 Roman AR denarius; 3.83 g, 18.2 mm Obv: DIVA...
But it was a mule that proved it was issued by Rome! (Buttrey article).
Oh no! :eek: I hope nobody was injured.
Oh boy! T-bone! [MEDIA] No, Homer! Not THAT T-bone! [MEDIA] Not that T-Bone, either! I'm talkin' 'bout Trebonianus, affectionately known as...
That's interesting. It's a good thing mint workers in antiquity accidentally created so many mules that we're able to extrapolate all sorts of...
The only thing even remotely similar when I search RPC for "Faustina Artemis" is this one -- which is not it. [ATTACH]
Separate names with a comma.