Log in or Sign up
Coin Talk
Home
Forums
>
Coin Forums
>
Ancient Coins
>
Ancient: Ashoka of India
>
Reply to Thread
Message:
<p>[QUOTE="dougsmit, post: 1755655, member: 19463"]<a href="http://www.delanceyplace.com/index.php" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="http://www.delanceyplace.com/index.php" rel="nofollow">http://www.delanceyplace.com/index.php</a></p><p>Each day I get an email with an excerpt from a book selected to remind me how little (occasionally how much) I know about some subject. Sometimes these subjects touch on history and, even more rarely, on coins. Today's selection (link above) tells the story of Ashoka who ruled in India <span style="font-size: 16px"><font face="Georgia"><span style="color: #000000">304-232 BC. The piece says nothing about coins but coins of Ashoka are relatively common and easily identifiable. </span></font></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 16px"><font face="Georgia"><span style="color: #000000">Indian punch marked silver comes cut in many shapes but both of the Ashoka coins I have owned have been rectangular. In this period there should be five punches on one side of the coin and one on the reverse. The five usually overlap to some degree making it worth a bit of searching to find coins with clear punches. Each of the five refines the ID of the coin starting with some (sun, six armed symbol) that appear on most punchmarked coins and ending with others that narrow it down to mints or issues but that I have not studied enough to explain here without driving me to research so early in the morning. Coins of Ashoka will have the sign on the reverse with the three circles connected by a line which this example has on both sides. The specific issue mark (of which there are many for Ashoka) appears just below and left of the Ashoka mark and overlars the triple hill mark in the lower right corner. My best guess on this mark is a standing soldier (Mitchiner 4178) but I am less than certain of this. There is a lot about Indian punchmarked silver I do not understand and many coins with symbols that overlap or are poorly struck to a point that I will avoid them. I'll stick to examples with readable marks at least to the degree of this example. Does anyone else find interest in these? </span></font></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 16px"><font face="Georgia"><span style="color: #000000">[ATTACH=full]277018[/ATTACH] </span></font></span>[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="dougsmit, post: 1755655, member: 19463"][url]http://www.delanceyplace.com/index.php[/url] Each day I get an email with an excerpt from a book selected to remind me how little (occasionally how much) I know about some subject. Sometimes these subjects touch on history and, even more rarely, on coins. Today's selection (link above) tells the story of Ashoka who ruled in India [SIZE=16px][FONT=Georgia][COLOR=#000000]304-232 BC. The piece says nothing about coins but coins of Ashoka are relatively common and easily identifiable. [/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [SIZE=16px][FONT=Georgia][COLOR=#000000]Indian punch marked silver comes cut in many shapes but both of the Ashoka coins I have owned have been rectangular. In this period there should be five punches on one side of the coin and one on the reverse. The five usually overlap to some degree making it worth a bit of searching to find coins with clear punches. Each of the five refines the ID of the coin starting with some (sun, six armed symbol) that appear on most punchmarked coins and ending with others that narrow it down to mints or issues but that I have not studied enough to explain here without driving me to research so early in the morning. Coins of Ashoka will have the sign on the reverse with the three circles connected by a line which this example has on both sides. The specific issue mark (of which there are many for Ashoka) appears just below and left of the Ashoka mark and overlars the triple hill mark in the lower right corner. My best guess on this mark is a standing soldier (Mitchiner 4178) but I am less than certain of this. There is a lot about Indian punchmarked silver I do not understand and many coins with symbols that overlap or are poorly struck to a point that I will avoid them. I'll stick to examples with readable marks at least to the degree of this example. Does anyone else find interest in these? [/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [SIZE=16px][FONT=Georgia][COLOR=#000000][ATTACH=full]277018[/ATTACH] [/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE][/QUOTE]
Your name or email address:
Do you already have an account?
No, create an account now.
Yes, my password is:
Forgot your password?
Stay logged in
Coin Talk
Home
Forums
>
Coin Forums
>
Ancient Coins
>
Ancient: Ashoka of India
>
Home
Home
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Activity
Recent Posts
Forums
Forums
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Posts
Competitions
Competitions
Quick Links
Competition Index
Rules, Terms & Conditions
Gallery
Gallery
Quick Links
Search Media
New Media
Showcase
Showcase
Quick Links
Search Items
Most Active Members
New Items
Directory
Directory
Quick Links
Directory Home
New Listings
Members
Members
Quick Links
Notable Members
Current Visitors
Recent Activity
New Profile Posts
Sponsors
Menu
Search
Search titles only
Posted by Member:
Separate names with a comma.
Newer Than:
Search this thread only
Search this forum only
Display results as threads
Useful Searches
Recent Posts
More...