Arminius Numismatics

money sorted by region or empire


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Galerie > Ancient World > The Roman Empire > Rome (modern Roma, Italy)
 80-81 AD., Domitian Caesar, Rome mint, Dupondius, Coh. 32.
Domitian Caesar, Rome mint, 80-81 AD., 
Æ Dupondius (28-29 mm / 15,03 g), 
Obv.: CAES DIVI AVG VESP F DOMITIAN COS VII , laureate head of Domitian facing r. 
Rev.: CERES - AVGVST / S - C , Ceres, veiled, standing l., holding corn-ears and long sceptre.
cf. RIC II (new) 512 (Titus) ; RIC II (old) (Titus) 165a (common) ; cf. RPC II 508 ; Coh. 32 ; BMC Titus 237 (dupondius) = CBN Titus 237 ; cf. Cahn 8 .

Curtis Clay 24/09/2010: 
" The difference is mainly in the lettering. Thracian mint uses letters of uneven thickness with pronounced serifs and terminal flourishes, producing, in Kraay's words, "a spidery effect".
Also, the reverses of Thracian coins are said to be flat or slightly convex, in contrast to Rome, where the reverses are usually concave.
RIC p. 194: Division of middle bronzes of Domitian as Caesar under Titus between Rome and Thrace can be problematic, since the same obv. legend was used at both mints."But the 'Thrace' mint examples have only the DOMITIAN legend form and their frequent occurrence in the coin trade recently adds weight to the argument for a Balkan origin." "
Schlüsselwörter: Domitian Caesar Rome Dupondius Ceres Corn-ears Sceptre

80-81 AD., Domitian Caesar, Rome mint, Dupondius, Coh. 32.

Domitian Caesar, Rome mint, 80-81 AD.,
Æ Dupondius (28-29 mm / 15,03 g),
Obv.: CAES DIVI AVG VESP F DOMITIAN COS VII , laureate head of Domitian facing r.
Rev.: CERES - AVGVST / S - C , Ceres, veiled, standing l., holding corn-ears and long sceptre.
cf. RIC II (new) 512 (Titus) ; RIC II (old) (Titus) 165a (common) ; cf. RPC II 508 ; Coh. 32 ; BMC Titus 237 (dupondius) = CBN Titus 237 ; cf. Cahn 8 .

Curtis Clay 24/09/2010:
" The difference is mainly in the lettering. Thracian mint uses letters of uneven thickness with pronounced serifs and terminal flourishes, producing, in Kraay's words, "a spidery effect".
Also, the reverses of Thracian coins are said to be flat or slightly convex, in contrast to Rome, where the reverses are usually concave.
RIC p. 194: Division of middle bronzes of Domitian as Caesar under Titus between Rome and Thrace can be problematic, since the same obv. legend was used at both mints."But the 'Thrace' mint examples have only the DOMITIAN legend form and their frequent occurrence in the coin trade recently adds weight to the argument for a Balkan origin." "

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Datei-Information
Dateiname:9900.jpg
Name des Albums:Arminius / Rome (modern Roma, Italy)
Schlüsselwörter:Domitian / Caesar / Rome / Dupondius / Ceres / Corn-ears / Sceptre
Dateigröße:153 KB
Hinzugefügt am:%24. %233 %2010
Abmessungen:1024 x 512 Pixel
Angezeigt:22 mal
URL:http://www.arminius-numismatics.com/coppermine1414/cpg15x/displayimage.php?pid=5814
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