They fooled me with this ancient lamp, but I don't regret to have bought it anyway.[ATTACH]
I think this coin of Alexander the Great is thought to be a silver drachm. It has the forehead of Pegasus down on the left field of reverse,...
@ancientnut. I was wondering how many museums would envy you !
They're just like 3 charming candles before Christmas. They make us feel happy.
In 271 AD, Zenobia the queen of Palmyra found herself harassed by the mounting Roman hegemony. She had the courage to name her son Vabalathus as...
The MOU would induce us to hide our Alexandrian coins in a deep ground
So the coin pertains to the Class C of anonymous folles, with Christ on obverse raising hand and holding Gospels. It was struck under Michael IV...
The sacred cross with the corresponding letters in 4 sections of reverse are very usual on Byzantine coins. However, detecting the figure on...
The cross on the obverse of this Byzantine coin inspires the Holiday season of Christmas. I think it's from the anonymous series struck in the...
I've got this raw one of Gallus With the letter S in the left field of reverse.[ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Hi guys. I don't understand. The first time that I looked on obverse, I guessed it was a dinosaur with that long turning neck we usually see in...
Here are two shots showing both obverse and reverse. Hope they help a little bit. Thank you.[ATTACH] [ATTACH]
What a coincidence! I just found a "weird" animal on a tiny coin. I wanted to soak it in distilled water and shoot it again in sunlight tomorrow....
The reverse of this bronze coin of Licinius is reminiscent of a similar one struck in Rome by Emperor Constantine The Great. It was thought then...
The coin you're showing was struck in the city of Homs or Hims of Syria. You can read this on the right field of reverse.
Hello again. I'm posting these 2 Sassanian coins which weigh respectively 2.67 g. and 3.31 g. I guess they're less common than the first one...
I have to note that Empress Galeria was the only Roman ruler who engraved Venus on all of her coins. Curious indeed. She would have rather chosen...
Obverse looks like Zeus.
Reading from right to left, the third letter is not the same.
Yamm! That is not an interjection. In fact he was the Phoenician god of the sea, just as his Greek counterpart Poseidon or the Roman Neptune. He...
Separate names with a comma.