Magnentius

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by dougsmit, Mar 14, 2016.

  1. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

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  3. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    I've seen worse! I see the possibility that the right one is Decentius Rome mint RIC 215 page 268 but JA may be right. Of your coins shown so far, this is the best IMHO but I like Magnentius more than most people.
     
  4. noname

    noname Well-Known Member

    Thanks for the info, so is it a barbarous imitation, or something?
     
  5. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    The style is clearly barbarous in my opinion. Some collectors don't care for that term, though.
     
  6. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    Every so often I feel the need to show this regrettable coin. I found it in a junk box many years ago and made it into a necklace for my wife who has worn it a number of times. The obverse is shot but most likely Magnentius. I feel guilty turning any coin into jewelry but this one was one sided so I did. It got worse whn my wife and I had dinner with Valentinian and his wife at the home of a mutual friend and he commented on a point I had missed. The coin has a definiteSiscia mintmark and there are no known coins of Magnentius from that city. Oops! I feel better in that the spelling errors make it quite certainly barbarous but why someone copied a common reverse of Magnentius and changed the mintmark to Siscia is just another of those question that will never be answered. Look at the good side: I didn't drill a hole in it. :angelic:
    rx7095bbnecklace.jpg

    Show any coins that prove you are dumber than a box of rocks.
     
    Mikey Zee, Bing and zumbly like this.
  7. noname

    noname Well-Known Member

    I got this bust cent when I was 10, purely because I didn't have a bust cent at the time, huge mistake, spent 50 bucks on this one.
     

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  8. Valentinian

    Valentinian Well-Known Member

    FEL TEMP REPARATIO is a very common late Roman legend, but less so on coins of Magnentius. Here is a "galley" type:

    MagnentiusGalleyO70.JPG MagnentiusGalleyR70.JPG

    23 mm. 5.25 grams. 6:00 die axis.
    Head right, bare. A behind neck.
    Emperor in military dress standing left on a galley, holding victory on globe and standard with chi-rho, Victory at stern holding rudder. A in field left.
    TRS in exergue.
    RIC Trier 260. Failmezger 424.
     
  9. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    Yes, this one is hard for me. I upgraded mine with one no better - just different. I kept both. That is a problem and bonus with Magnentius. There are many variations on coins that are the same.
    rx7070bb2223.jpg rx7075bb2920.jpg
     
  10. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

    I still think the FH boots are made of spaghetti n meat balls. Great coins Doug.

    111_069.JPG
     
  11. maridvnvm

    maridvnvm Well-Known Member

    I have finally tracked down my own Galley type.

    Bastien dates this type to being issued between the usurpation by Magnentius on 18th January A.D. 350 and his taking of Rome on 27th February A.D. 350.

    Magnentius

    Obv:– IM CAE MAGN-ENTIVS AVG, bare-headed, draped, cuirassed bust right, A behind bust
    Rev:– FEL TEMP-REPARATIO, emperor standing left on galley, holding Victory and labarum, Victory seated at the helm. A in left field
    Mint – Trier (//TRS). 1st Phase. 18th January A.D. 350 to 27th February A.D. 350
    Reference(s) – Cohen 11. Bastien 11 (12 examples cited). RIC VIII Trier 260

    [​IMG]

    I need to go back and try and take better photos.
     
    Marsyas Mike, stevex6, Bing and 4 others like this.
  12. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Those were Doc Marten's Boots! 64 Eye, if I remember! :D
     
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  13. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    I have a couple... basics...

    RI Magnentius 351-352 CE AE 1 CHI RHO Obv-Rev.jpg

    RI Magnentius 351-352 CE AE 2 Maiorina 2 Victories holding wreath VOT V Obv-Rev.jpg
     
  14. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    ^
     
    Last edited: Jun 5, 2016
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