As you already know, big fan of that Honorius.
Hi @BenSi you know what would look good in your collection? A tetarteron of Richard Plantagenet from Cyprus.
336-337 he was called Dalmatius and Delmatius on his coinage, and not just the petty reduced "follis" but his siliquae also. Seems like they...
Thank you so much for adding your specimens. I also think that @dougsmit 's spec is from Arles and I think you can see a ghost of the first S in...
I'm very glad that you are showing your examples of this type and similar contemporary types, they are all superior specimens that show why,...
This is, I think, an interesting coin and a rather scarce one: [ATTACH] Dalmatius as Caesar (335-337) AE3/4 17mm 2.76g, reduced follis/nummus,...
A grand denier of Chartres: [ATTACH] AR22x21mm 1.20g grand denier, minted in the city of Chartres around 1000. + CARTIS CIVITAS; cross...
And a Theodosius I to compliment the series, this time with the personification of Constantinopolis rather than Roma, RIC IX 47d with...
They are similar to the Hungarian playing cards, used usually to play Cross: [ATTACH]
Here's a couple of interesting Procopius AEs: one unlisted in RIC as a type and the other one for the mintmark and field markings. The coinage of...
If it was advertised as RIC 419 some thought that it was worth it perhaps. But I don't think it is RIC 419 but a regular Theodosius I. And your...
Theodosius I. The Sincona spec is also very likely Theodosius I from the same series. If there is indeed a Theodosius II with this reverse (not...
I know Roma uses Fedex but what did Papillon use?
DAT HONORIUS IS BANGIN.
I really like the Anarchy and the Scandinavian imitation piece.
One more thing to take into account, this spec has a double-barred C (visible on the reverse particularly well (and confirming the same for the...
Since you've come that far, I'd say strip it bare and see if there are more details hidden by the deposits and patina.
The head right was likely the first "experimental" type issued for Bohemond III at his majority in 1163 and apart from the "irregular" types of...
Usually AVG N means Augustus noster.
Keeping with the lingering Crusader theme from last week, here is a denier of Amalric of Jerusalem: [ATTACH] AR19mm, 0.98g billon denier, minted...
Separate names with a comma.