There are 8106 coins on the website, 335 of which are sold
|
Attribution: SNG Copenhagen 824
Date: 480-350 BC
Obverse: Forepart of lion right, with head reverted
Reverse: Quadripartite incuse square pellets in deeper impressions
Size: 13.04mm
Weight: 2.14 grams
Rarity: 5
Description: VF
|
Attribution: SNG ANS 670
Date: 480-466 BC
Obverse: Selinon (wild parsley) leaf
Reverse: Incuse square diagonally divided into 12 sections
Size: 24.71mm
Weight: 7.40 grams
Rarity: 6
Description: VF. At one time this contemporary forgery would have been plated with silver.
|
Attribution: AMNG 210
Date: 148-146 BC
Obverse: Helmeted head of Athena right
Reverse: ΓΑΙΟΥ / ΤΑΜΙΟΥ, cow standing right, monogram between legs
Size: 19.64mm
Weight: 9.41 grams
Rarity: 5
Description: good Fine
|
Attribution: De La Tour 689
Date: 300 BC
Obverse: Youthful male bust left
Reverse: M-A in lower partitions, • at center
Size: 12.47mm
Weight: .61 grams
Rarity: 5
Description: VF
|
Attribution: cf. RIC IV 240 Rome
Date: AD 214
Obverse: ANTONINVS PIVS AVG GERM, laureate head right
Reverse: PM TR P XVII COS IIII P P, Jupiter standing left holding thunderbolt and long scepter, eagle at feet
Size: 18.13mm
Weight: 2.55 grams
Rarity: 5
Description: VF. Limes denarii were struck by official mints in bronze or billon generally on the northern frontier where silver was scarce. Many times they are mules with mismatched obverse and reverse dies. They were still valuated as a denarius. Many times the weak strikes are attributed to the use of old dies sent to the frontier to be used once they were too worn for Imperial use. An interesting part of Roman history
|
|