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<p>[QUOTE="Ryro, post: 4364189, member: 91461"]Do I???<img src="styles/default/xenforo/clear.png" class="mceSmilieSprite mceSmilie93" alt=":troll:" unselectable="on" unselectable="on" /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1103087[/ATTACH]</p><p>In Italy, as with other nations, early trade used a system of barter. Aes rude(Latin: "rough bronze"), used perhaps as early as the early 8th century B.C., was the earliest metal proto-currency in central Italy. In the 5th century B.C., bronze replaced cattle as the primary measure of value in trade. Aes rude are rough lumpy bronze ingots with no marks or design, some are flat and oblong, others are square, while many are irregular and shapeless.</p><p>The metal is mostly copper with roughly 5% tin. Weight varies considerably with some exceeding twelve pounds and others under an ounce. Many smaller examples are fragments of broken larger specimens. A balance was necessary to measure value for commercial transactions.</p><p>weight 35.881g, length 36.1mm</p><p>[ATTACH=full]1103085[/ATTACH]</p><p>Aes premonetale. Aesformatum, </p><p>6th-4th century BC. AE. g. 64.72 mm. 40.00. Former ArtemideKunstauktionen</p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1103086[/ATTACH] </p><p><br /></p><p>ROMAN REPUBLIC </p><p>Aes Formatum. Centuries VI-IV BCE CENTRAL ITALY or LAZIO. Anv .: Element in semicircular shape on one side and serrated on the other./ Ancient Batarang</p><p>Condition: Very Fine 83.41 gr 56.70 mm Former Ares[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Ryro, post: 4364189, member: 91461"]Do I???:troll: [ATTACH=full]1103087[/ATTACH] In Italy, as with other nations, early trade used a system of barter. Aes rude(Latin: "rough bronze"), used perhaps as early as the early 8th century B.C., was the earliest metal proto-currency in central Italy. In the 5th century B.C., bronze replaced cattle as the primary measure of value in trade. Aes rude are rough lumpy bronze ingots with no marks or design, some are flat and oblong, others are square, while many are irregular and shapeless. The metal is mostly copper with roughly 5% tin. Weight varies considerably with some exceeding twelve pounds and others under an ounce. Many smaller examples are fragments of broken larger specimens. A balance was necessary to measure value for commercial transactions. weight 35.881g, length 36.1mm [ATTACH=full]1103085[/ATTACH] Aes premonetale. Aesformatum, 6th-4th century BC. AE. g. 64.72 mm. 40.00. Former ArtemideKunstauktionen [ATTACH=full]1103086[/ATTACH] ROMAN REPUBLIC Aes Formatum. Centuries VI-IV BCE CENTRAL ITALY or LAZIO. Anv .: Element in semicircular shape on one side and serrated on the other./ Ancient Batarang Condition: Very Fine 83.41 gr 56.70 mm Former Ares[/QUOTE]
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