Hello, I have found a coin. From what I have researched it is a rare coin from the Holy Roman Empire. I would like to send a picture of the coin because it has been modified. Judging from the patina on the coin the modification was done around the time of circulation. The modification is that it has been turned into a button.(there is a loop soldered to the back) The coin is a 1823 Max. Joseph Konig Von Baiern - about the size of US dime. The reverse as stated has been modified, the visable markings are,wheat or olive branches with a crown on top, on the left 3 or w LAND on the right MUNZ with a K below it and dated 1823. Not sure what I have especially due to the modification. I would appreiciate any input you have regaurding my find. You have a simalar coin on your site the face is the same but the words on back are different. Thank You, Mark Price
Lenwe
1. nov. 2011, 18:06
English version :
Hello all I recently found a Roman coin that turns out to be an after cleaning sesterce Hadrianus augustus of 23.70 g.
but after hours of surfing the net I find no site there no pictures corresponding exactly to my room: /
can you give me more details about this part.
Thank you in advance Lenwë.
I would like to post an image but I do not know how this site? ...
Bonjour a tous j'ai trouvé récemment une monnaie Romaine qui après nettoyage s’avère être une sesterce hadrianus augustus de 23,70g.
mais après des heures de navigation sur le net je ne trouve aucun site n'y aucune photo correspondant exactement a ma pièce :/
pouvez vous me donner plus de détails concernant cette pièce.
Merci d'avance Lenwë.
j'aimerai poster une image mais je ne sait pas comment faire sur ce site?...
This is the strongest iconographical evidence for propaganda on Caligula's coinage. I have seen many DIVO AVG sestertii struck under Gaius Caligula and these are the nicest.
Gaius (Caligula). AD 37-41. Æ “Medallic” Sestertius (30.30 g, 7h). Rome mint. Struck AD 37-38. Pietas seated left, holding patera and resting arm on small draped figure standing facing on basis / Gaius standing left, holding patera over garlanded altar; victimarius holding bull for sacrifice and attendant holding a patera standing on either side; garlanded hexastyle temple of Divus Augustus in background; pediment decorated with sacrificial scene; quadriga and Victories as acroteria; statues of Romulus and Aeneas along roof line. RIC I 36.
This coin commemorates the dedication of the temple of Divus Augustus, completed in 37 AD, with a remarkable scene of Gaius Caligula in his role of pontifex maximus leading the sacrificial ceremonies.
Joe Geranio
Julio Claudian Iconographic Association
Caligula DIVO AVG Sestertius- Joe Geranio
For More on Temple Iconography of Caligula see:
The Dedication of the Hexastyle Temple (Sestertius) by Caligula: The Temple of Concord?
One final aspect of the seated figure of Caligula on the consensv dupondius is worth examining. Could Caligula have been the first living princeps to ever appear radiate on Roman coinage? B.E. Levy. in her article entitled "Caligula's Radiate Crown," finds traces of a radiate crown on two pieces: One in the Princeton University Library; the other in a private collection.
Levy brings further evidence to light when she suggests that the bronze provincial issues of at least three or four mints show Caluigula with radiate attribution (one from Alexandria, but this issue may represent Helios.)43 Another issue from the province of Asia shows a spikey Hellenistic crown.44 Even stronger evidence that the radiate crown did exist can be seen on consensv dupondii , where the die engraver shortened the vertical bar on the T in ET to accomadate the crown, while the entire letter T is slightly raised in the second Princeton piece. Levy mentions that the radiate crown is neglected in descriptions which follow illustrations in catalouges. In specifically looking for the radiated crown on the consensv dupondii, There are at least three issues that I have been found via the art trade.45 It has been suggested that the radiate crown is occasionally used on Roman coinage to distinguish a newly elevated Emperor. Thus, the Roman radiate crown was not a true piece of insignia: Its meaning was flexible and its use optional.46
See this coin. There is a possiblity that this coin's reverse was designed to show the seated figure of Gaius Caligula as "radiate" see link for photo below. On most of these issues the "T" in "ET" was raised to make room for a radiate or spikey attribution. B.E. Levy first interpreted this idea, but since I have seen at least 9 examples on specimens. Could Caligula have been the first living princeps to appear radiate on Roman imperial coinage, before Nero?
Joe Geranio
Julio Claudian Iconographic Association
DIAZOU
23. sept. 2011, 18:42
bonjour, j'ai une piece , je pense en argent et j'aimerai connaitre sa provenance. Elle a sur une face une tete de femme et de l'autre coté un personnage un taureau et je crois une urne avec des flamme. pourriez vous m'aider. merci beaucoup
ian
23. sept. 2011, 12:46
This coin clearly uses the same image (Slightly altered) as the Phoenix iron works Sheffield coin also never been an iron works in Sedbury, Gloustershire that I can work out from old maps etc. Any ideas?
Vandahoo
5. sept. 2011, 14:08
Es handelt sich um Haeberlin 223,1 und nicht um 233,1. Die Tafelangabe ist korrekt
Bezzyboo
28. août 2011, 19:06
I have one of these coins which I've had lying around for over 25 years. I dont know if its real or fake but would like the chance to find out..
Does anyone know how I would go about this?
I'd be grateful for ANY help anyone would be kind enough to give. I'm in London UK if that makes any difference.
Thanks
Bezz
titeuf
22. août 2011, 20:55
Modern fake. Published in Bulletin on Counterfeits Vol 1, No 2, May 1976.
titeuf
22. août 2011, 20:53
Modern fake. Published in Bulletin on Counterfeits Vol 1, No 2, May 1976.
titeuf
22. août 2011, 20:51
Modern fake. Published in Bulletin on Counterfeits Vol 1, No 2, May 1976.
titeuf
22. août 2011, 20:43
Modern fake. Published in Bulletin on Counterfeits Vol 1, No 2, May 1976.
titeuf
22. août 2011, 20:40
Modern fake. Published in Bulletin on Counterfeits Vol 1, No 2, May 1976.
CFOSTE
21. août 2011, 04:34
I tried to post a picture of this tetradrachm on this sight . . to no avail. Ohh well; copy/paste doesn't work. Guess she'll remain in latency
CFOSTE
19. août 2011, 08:57
I decided to invest a little money in silver back in 2009. Ebay was a sight I had spent alot of money on, and I bought several roles of American silver. One day I typed in 'Greek silver atique coin' and this coin showed up. The seller was a man from Ioninna who claimed his great grandfather found this coin. His spelling was poor, hense the coin didn't show up on many search engines, and so I decided to check out his claim to see if it was really worth $4ooo. Well, there was hardly any search records at the time, just a poor picture from the British Museum. I checked his ebey record and he was 100% and from Greece during their financial crisis, and he had debt. I took a chance and spent $435. Now when I recieved the coin I was amazed at the dry/parched look of the glowing silver's oxidation, the black between the details looked baked, and also, the coin is dense.This coin is beautiful! I have been looking for signs of this coin for 2 years, they just don't exist. Well now I have found one; here. My coin doesn't have the scarring, knife cuts, and is a little more worn. It has a planchett defect cutting into Dione's head, and is set more like the one in the British museum.I don't know if it is original, but I do know it came from Epirus, and from a young Greek man who claimed his great grand father found it.
Chippi
5. juil. 2011, 16:36
Dieses Gordian stammt aus Stratonikeia in Karien, nicht aus Nikaia in Bithynien. Eine Referenz hab ich aber nicht zu bieten.
Lech_Stepniewski
1. juil. 2011, 11:06
This is not Galerius Maximian (RIC VI ROMA 120b) but Maximian Herculius. Therefore RIC VI ROMA 103b
mais la face c'est la même que sure votre pièce ??
il ya le type avec la croix large et les deux xx et de l'autre coté la dame qui regarde nous regarde elle n'a pas la tète tourné comme sur le liens ^^
es que vous connaissez cette pièce combien elle coute merci d'avance ^^
nounourse
18. juin 2011, 22:19
je viens de trouvé une pièce qui ressemble cella la déférence c'est que la croix et plus grande et l’écriture a gauche de la croix ce termine avec XX
C'est écrit ''ONOD VOT XX '' et la croix est plus large que ceux qui ce trouve ici ???
fara1970
11. juin 2011, 12:15
nice piece but it is not so uique
fara1970
11. juin 2011, 12:11
Dear sir,
it is nice coin and found 2 years ago the same of it in south jordan but the king Philip was without beard >
http://www.forumancientcoins.com/fakes/displayimage.php?pos=-11869
Hello all I recently found a Roman coin that turns out to be an after cleaning sesterce Hadrianus augustus of 23.70 g.
but after hours of surfing the net I find no site there no pictures corresponding exactly to my room: /
can you give me more details about this part.
Thank you in advance Lenwë.
I would like to post an image but I do not know how this site? ...
http://imageshack.us/g/694/dsc01254zd.jpg/
mais après des heures de navigation sur le net je ne trouve aucun site n'y aucune photo correspondant exactement a ma pièce :/
pouvez vous me donner plus de détails concernant cette pièce.
Merci d'avance Lenwë.
j'aimerai poster une image mais je ne sait pas comment faire sur ce site?...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/antiquitiesproject/5707329084/ and http://www.flickr.com/photos/julio-claudians/3863574629/
This is the strongest iconographical evidence for propaganda on Caligula's coinage. I have seen many DIVO AVG sestertii struck under Gaius Caligula and these are the nicest.
Gaius (Caligula). AD 37-41. Æ “Medallic” Sestertius (30.30 g, 7h). Rome mint. Struck AD 37-38. Pietas seated left, holding patera and resting arm on small draped figure standing facing on basis / Gaius standing left, holding patera over garlanded altar; victimarius holding bull for sacrifice and attendant holding a patera standing on either side; garlanded hexastyle temple of Divus Augustus in background; pediment decorated with sacrificial scene; quadriga and Victories as acroteria; statues of Romulus and Aeneas along roof line. RIC I 36.
This coin commemorates the dedication of the temple of Divus Augustus, completed in 37 AD, with a remarkable scene of Gaius Caligula in his role of pontifex maximus leading the sacrificial ceremonies.
Joe Geranio
Julio Claudian Iconographic Association
Caligula DIVO AVG Sestertius- Joe Geranio
For More on Temple Iconography of Caligula see:
The Dedication of the Hexastyle Temple (Sestertius) by Caligula: The Temple of Concord?
http://www.forumancientcoins.com/NumisWiki/view.asp?key=The%20Hexastyle%20Temple%20Dedicated%20by%20Caligula%20%20The%20Temple%20of%20Concord%20%20Joe%20Geranio
Levy brings further evidence to light when she suggests that the bronze provincial issues of at least three or four mints show Caluigula with radiate attribution (one from Alexandria, but this issue may represent Helios.)43 Another issue from the province of Asia shows a spikey Hellenistic crown.44 Even stronger evidence that the radiate crown did exist can be seen on consensv dupondii , where the die engraver shortened the vertical bar on the T in ET to accomadate the crown, while the entire letter T is slightly raised in the second Princeton piece. Levy mentions that the radiate crown is neglected in descriptions which follow illustrations in catalouges. In specifically looking for the radiated crown on the consensv dupondii, There are at least three issues that I have been found via the art trade.45 It has been suggested that the radiate crown is occasionally used on Roman coinage to distinguish a newly elevated Emperor. Thus, the Roman radiate crown was not a true piece of insignia: Its meaning was flexible and its use optional.46
See this coin. There is a possiblity that this coin's reverse was designed to show the seated figure of Gaius Caligula as "radiate" see link for photo below. On most of these issues the "T" in "ET" was raised to make room for a radiate or spikey attribution. B.E. Levy first interpreted this idea, but since I have seen at least 9 examples on specimens. Could Caligula have been the first living princeps to appear radiate on Roman imperial coinage, before Nero?
http://www.forumancientcoins.com/numiswiki/view.asp?key=Caligulas%20Spikey%20Attribution-%20Joe%20Geranio
Joe Geranio
Julio Claudian Iconographic Association
Does anyone know how I would go about this?
I'd be grateful for ANY help anyone would be kind enough to give. I'm in London UK if that makes any difference.
Thanks
Bezz
http://www.sacra-moneta.com/Actualites-numismatique/Solidus-de-Pulcherie-imperatrice-byzantine.html
mais la face c'est la même que sure votre pièce ??
il ya le type avec la croix large et les deux xx et de l'autre coté la dame qui regarde nous regarde elle n'a pas la tète tourné comme sur le liens ^^
es que vous connaissez cette pièce combien elle coute merci d'avance ^^
C'est écrit ''ONOD VOT XX '' et la croix est plus large que ceux qui ce trouve ici ???
it is nice coin and found 2 years ago the same of it in south jordan but the king Philip was without beard >
thanks