Here is the other FEL TEMP REPARATIO type of Constantius II that is not common: [ATTACH] 24 mm. 5.78 grams. Emperor standing left, holding...
"@Valentinian, I think this was intended for the "An uncommon coin of a very common emperor" thread." EDIT: @gsimonel is right. There are perils...
No, it has not been posted yet. It is a FEL TEMP REPARATIO type with the emperor standing and only one captive (and no "Hut").
Nowadays Chrome (maybe other browsers too) wants site URLs to begin: https:// which is a securer version of the former standard http:// When I...
I had all five volumes of Roman Silver Coins and found volumes 2, 3, and 4, to be of almost no use and passed them along. Volume 1 has Republican...
Here is the rarest FEL TEMP REPARATIO type, emperor, nimbate, riding right spearing two kneeling foes. Constantius II RIC VIII Rome 184 (= Rome...
If you buy from respected dealers your chances of buying a fake are low (not zero, but low). Here is a list of very many good dealers:...
But, there are only ten of that spinning picture available! Get your order in before they are all gone! I thought the tulip-bulb craze was a...
During the early Byzantine period the Thessalonica mint did not mint copper for Anastasius and did not mint the follis ("M", for 40-nummus)...
Here is a wolf and twins from a city far from Rome: [ATTACH] 29-28 mm. 9.21 grams. At Laodiceia ad Mare, Seleucis and Pieria (Syria) IMP C M...
It sounds like you are talking about one city. The drop was nationwide--across all big cities--and cannot be explained by policing in one city....
Ah! My bad! I see it now as a monogram, weak on the right side. Sorry!
There was a drop in crime. The causes have been studied. Put tons of data in and try to let neutral standard statistical techniques tell you what...
That is a very nice nummus with a better bust than most. The ones with "A" (for "1" nummus) are attributed to the reign of Justinian (527-565)...
Those are not the current emperors. That is the reverse. The coin is of Leo IV (775-780) and the obverse has Leo IV and Constantine VI (his son)...
Right. Here is a web page on PROFECTIO coins: http://augustuscoins.com/ed/PROFECTIO/
If there were two rulers, one Augustus and one Caesar, Rome used "AVGG" for the plural anyway, even though it looks like it should refer to two...
"ADVENTVS" means "arrival". The arrival of the emperor to Rome was a major event worthy of celebration and commemoration. [ATTACH] Septimius...
Here is a coin with an obverse legend used only at Serdica: [ATTACH] IMP C AVRELIANVS INVICTVS AVG on an otherwise common type RESTITVT ORBIS...
460 euros hammer for a Herennia Etruscilla is high, but she often has an ugly portrait and is usually struck with worn dies. Here is one I got...
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