I have many web pages on ancient coins. Some were hard to find and lacked links on my "Table of Contents" page: http://augustuscoins.com/ed/ Now links to the missing pages have been added. You can find most of them in the "What's new?" section and the rest in the list where pages are classified by theme. Some pages have been greatly improved. My large site on AE coins of Valentinian and later (364-450) used to be organized by reverse type with low resolution pictures. Now it is also organized by emperor and many of the key photos have been replaced with much better pictures. http://augustuscoins.com/ed/ricix/ Look at the new reverse-type images lower down on that page. That site has over 100 pages and many photos remain to be improved, but the key photos and the site's navigation are much better. If you care about late Roman AE coins, take a look at the new version. It includes clear type sets for each emperor: http://augustuscoins.com/ed/ricix/#byemp I have a page on links to ancient-coin web pages by other authors: http://augustuscoins.com/ed/sitelinks.html You might bookmark that one. I try to keep useful with links that work.
Great update, Warren!! I especially appreciate the upgraded photos on your fabulous Late Roman site. (Grateful to see you've linked my Urbs Roma Felix writeup too! Still super jealous of your full-flan Theodosius II.) Note that the Late Roman index has type 59 wrong... it should be the rare Maximus victory type, right? It links to this correctly, but the index square is wrong. VRF is type 49, indexed and linked correctly. I think the contents section on the main page would be easier to read as bulleted lists, but maybe that's just me. I guess you're wanting to keep it as short as possible. Maybe you could do that by reducing the font size? Anyway, great stuff!!
Very helpful, thanks for the updates! I'll be adding much of the material you linked to my personal biblio / links / research/ notes file. As I say when the opportunity presents, I use the annotated ancient coin catalogs page a lot (alongside a handful of other such sources, both institutional and collector authored, including Andrew McCabe's, listed on your links page above; I've also learned of rnumis.com more recently). For anyone even slightly interested in catalogs or provenance research, I recommend it: http://augustuscoins.com/ed/catalogs/ I've been meaning to start putting my own catalog and FPL annotations online, along with links for digitized catalogs (similar to Steve M's / rnumis -- forget his username here). Hopefully I'll get things in shape soon to start showing other catalog people what I've been working on. It's amazing how much is now digital, but takes a lot of organization to find; and even more not digitized, for which collector annotations really help (as do books on ancient coin catalogs like John Spring's & David Fanning's). Thanks for the great work and updates!