So we went to the coin show today and four eagles followed us home.

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by archicard, Jan 25, 2015.

  1. archicard

    archicard Member

    My daughter (who just turned 8) and I went to a local coin show this morning. She has been becoming more interested in ancient coins than any of the other types that she collects. She became especially interested in Roman Alexandrian coins when I explained some of the history to her. What's not to like about the blending of Roman, Greek and Egyptian cultures?

    She is a strong persuader and we came home with these four coins. I was wondering if anyone could help me figure out which emperors are on them. My greek is pretty rough but I believe that #1 may be Tacitus and perhaps #2 & 3 are Aurelian. #4 is a total mystery to me. I was also wondering if anyone knew of a good online source to help learn more about them and eventually attribute them. Thanks.
    4-egyptian-eagles.jpg
     
    stevex6, ro1974, randygeki and 9 others like this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Nice grabs. These can be bought inexpensively, its the silver ones that tend to get expensive.
     
    coinman1234 likes this.
  4. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Excellent choices! I'm avidly collecting coins of Roman Egypt, fueled by owning Keith Emmett's reference book.

    Coin 1: Tacitus, CE 275/6. Emmett 3972(1), rarity rating R1(most common)
    Coin 2: Aurelian, regnal year 6 (CE 274/5), Emmett 3927(6) R1
    Coin 3: can't quite make out the name or year, will look more carefully later
    Coin 4: also unable to determine. The year will remain unknown due to damage.
     
    coinman1234 and Bing like this.
  5. archicard

    archicard Member

    Thanks for the help. At least I was on the right path in trying to figure them out. I will have to track down a copy of Emmett's book.

    One thing about these coins that appeals to me is the way they portray the emperors. They tend to be less idealistic and flattering. The portraits often seem brutish and unsophisticated. I wonder if that was a commentary on how the Egyptians viewed their Roman rulers.
     
  6. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    While I agree with your ID's of the first three I am really bothered by #4. I might guess Trebonianus Gallus but I really do not know. Is it by chance heavier than the others?


    It really makes me happy when I hear of a child interested in dad's hobby. I wish I had an heir who wanted my collection when I'm done with it.
     
    stevex6 and randygeki like this.
  7. archicard

    archicard Member

    #4 does weigh more than the others. It weighs 9.6g compared to #3 7.6g. Both coins are essentially the same size. I would guess that the added weight indicates a higher amount of lead in the alloy.

    Thanks Doug, I am really fortunate. There aren't many kids that are thoughtful and patient enough to participate in collecting coins, especially ancients. I really enjoy sharing my hobby with my daughter. We have a lot of fun with it and even drag my wife to our coin club meetings with us!

    In regard to the issue of your collection and heirs, I am sure that most of us would be willing to put ourselves up for adoption if that were an option. :)
     
    randygeki likes this.
  8. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    No kidding.

    I was lucky my grandfather had a small amount of coins and was the one who actually got me into collecting as a whole. It wasnt ancients though and part of me wishes he was still alive so I could see what he would say and heck, maybe get into them too.
     
    TIF likes this.
  9. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    I offered to take my kids to the last coin show I went to, didn't get any takers.
    I think they would rather do long division. :p

    I hope one of these days they find it interesting.

    I recently found out my uncle collects united states coins. Until a couple months ago I never new he collected. I sat down with him and checked out his stuff. I'm going to bring him an ancient coin next time I see him.
     
  10. icerain

    icerain Mastir spellyr

    Always nice to hear kids having interest in collecting things whether they be their parents interests or something else.
     
  11. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    I'll send you the adoption papers. :)
     
    stevex6 likes this.
  12. Eng

    Eng Senior Eng

    Very cool, great start to your collection..:)
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page