Nice coins, OP and everyone! Nobody has posted a CLEMENTIA TEMP type yet: [ATTACH] Numerian, Augustus AD 283-284. Roman billon Antoninianus, 4.09...
An enviable assembly!
Outstanding! I only have one of these LRBC with Genius: [ATTACH] Maximinus II Daza, AD 309-313, as Augustus. Roman Æ follis, 21.4 mm, 4.88 g,...
None to show, but I came across this informative website by Kenneth Friedman and Richard Schaefer at Steve Brinkman's site detailing how these...
I'm convinced Mattingly and Seydenham erroneously carried over an error in Cohen when they described Antoninus Pius RIC 382b, a denarius of...
I took advantage of the morning sunshine to rephotograph this coin I photographed under artificial light several years and a couple of phones ago....
Fantastic additions, @Justin Lee !
Fantastic collection and an enviable display!
If there's a chance to post a Gallienus, I take it! [ATTACH] Gallienus, AD 253-268. Roman Billon Antoninianus, 2.84 g, 21.2 mm, 11 h. Antioch,...
Here's another that is apparently unpublished and which appears nowhere else online: [ATTACH] Severus Alexander and Julia Mamaea. Roman...
Although this reverse type is known for Septimius Severus, there isn't one of Julia Domna in Recueil général des monnaies grecques d'Asie mineure;...
Well, if this one originally had silvering, you'd never know it now: [ATTACH]
I am rolling my weak and aging eyes at this one. Gordian III and Faustina II, eh? Here's a properly attributed example from my collection:...
Denarii of Faustina I; I check every auction for examples I don't have. [ATTACH]
That's pretty neat for such a recently-minted coin!
Post a photo of the coin and we can tell you more about it.
An auction win adds to this little mini-set of Venus types on the sestertii of Julia Mamaea. Her bronzes portraying Venus depict the goddess in...
I'm fascinated by the hairstyles of the Roman empresses and once wrote a piece about Herennia Etruscilla because the early literature was not...
Nice! Those are fun! Here's mine from Deultum: [ATTACH] Tranquillina AD 241-244. Roman provincial Æ 24.1 mm, 8.06 g. Thrace, Deultum, AD...
Not at all; it's a good deal.
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