The old collection that the holder belongs to was probably from the Low Countries and the coin might have been a local find from somewhere on the...
In case you don't already know, hanging around on fields and spotting traces of previous settlements or natural history, without actually...
Not new, but acquired during the hiatus of the pandemic this summer: [ATTACH] Common enough ruler, common enough type, common enough mint, but...
Gosh, yes you are absolutely right :vamp::vamp::vamp::vamp::vamp:
Can't wait to order mine
I think it is possible that the restoration was done professionally by/at/for a museum in the same vein as it is done with ceramic or stone...
I am in no measure expert in colonial or "Greek imperial" coinage but they seem by far the most diverse and creative designs of the Roman world....
No prob
Thank you for your note. That one comes from a collector from Crimea and was presented as a "Gothia Theodoro follis" and the seller added this...
Gratian from Rome RIC 24c type xi ca. 367
If you feel your time is getting really short and death is imminent, I would advise to get the process of deciding which way to head and which...
This one makes for a fine drinking song [MEDIA]
Consider them as distinct issues: 1. the first one has the privy mark O in the right field and no prow on the reverse and no issue recorded for...
You couldn't see the mintmark before and you can clearly see it now. Improvement.
It is unlisted but it is more interesting than that. It should be rather before 57d, that has the O in field left and the officina is rather B...
I've seen a lot about these coins in the Israeli press, and my (largely non-numismatic) thoughts about this discovery are related to how well the...
It's a parvus of Sigismund of Luxembourg as King of Hungary.
Even without the rarity factor this is an impressive coin.
Solid coin.
Got my Duplessy to check on it and it's likely 223A or 223B, dated after the great debasement, to 1307-1310. In Ciani, another (by now considered...
Separate names with a comma.