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Classical Numismatic Group, Electronic Auction 406, lot 232, 27/09/2017

Greek 
THESSALY, Atrax. 3rd century BC. Æ Trichalkon (18mm, 6.43 g, 12h). Laureate head of Apollo right / ATPA-ΓI-Ω-И, warrior, raising hand, riding horse right. Rogers 169-71 var. (arrangement of ethnic); BCD Thessaly I 1032 var. (Φ on obv.); BCD Thessaly II 59.6-10 var. (arrangement of ethnic); HGC 4, 347. VF, green patina.
From the BCD Collection.

ILLUSTRAZIONE: PARTICOLARE DEL FREGIO DEL PARTENONE

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Nomos AG > obolos 11 Auction date: 8 December 2018
Lot number: 393  

Lot description:
LUCANIA. Paestum. Tiberius, 14-37. (Bronze, 17 mm, 4.14 g, 7 h), A. Vergilius Optimus, duovir. P S S C Laureate head of Tiberius to left. Rev. A VERGILIVS OPT IIVIR Mars standing left, holding vexillum and sword. Crawford, Paestum 7b. RPC I 618. SNG ANS 810. Rare. Nearly very fine.
Starting Price: 40 CHF

ILLUSTRAZIONE: BUSTO DI MARTE

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Baldwin's Auctions Ltd, Autumn 2008 Argentum Auction, lot 572, 8/11/2008

Ancient Coins. Kingdom of Baktria, Agathokleia and Strato I (c.135-125 BC), Drachm, diademed bust of Queen Agathokleia right, rev diademed king walking right, holding spear and bow (SNG ANS 981; Mitch type 303). Some porosity, cleaned, fine, rare.
Estimate: £70-90

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Roma Numismatics Limited, Auction 5, lot 755, 23/03/2013

Trajan AR Denarius.
Trajan AR Denarius. Rome, AD 103-111. IMP TRAIANO AVG GER DAC P M TR P, laureate bust right, drapery on far shoulder / COS V P P SPQR OPTIMO PRINC, Dacian standing with bound hands before pile of captured arms, DAC CAP in exergue. RIC 99; RSC 121a. 3.42g, 19mm, 6h. Good Extremely Fine.

ILLUSTRAZIONE:  DECEBALO, RE DELLA DACIA

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Roma Numismatics Limited, Auction 15, lot 546, 5/04/2018

Roman Imperial 
Trajan AV Aureus. Rome, AD 112-113. IMP TRAIANVS AVG GER DAC P M TR P COS VI P P, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right / Frontal view of the hexastyle façade of Trajan's Forum, with central entrance and two alcoves containing statues to either side, an elaborate statue group comprised of facing quadriga between three statues on each side atop the roof; FORVM TRAIAN in exergue. RIC 257; C 168 var. (not cuirassed); Calicó 1031; BMCRE 509; Biaggi 494; Woytek 409f. 7.30g, 19mm, 6h.
Good Extremely Fine. The finest example of this desirable type to have been offered in many years.
Trajan became consul for the sixth and final time on January 1, AD 112; on the same day he dedicated his new Forum complex. It is thought to have been designed by the architect Apollodorus who accompanied Trajan on his campaigns in Dacia and is famous for building a bridge across the Danube river recorded by ancient authors and artists. When complete, the vast complex consisted of the area fori (main square), the Basilica Ulpia, the column of Trajan, and two libraries, all situated adjacent to the Markets of Trajan on one side and the Forum Augustum on another. The project sought to exceed previous imperial fora in plan, scale and ornamentation while focusing directly on Trajan's military achievements in Dacia. Each imperial forum had specific architectural and decorative schemes which created specific ambiences; thus, Trajan's military theme is vastly different from the Forum of Vespasian (also known as the Temple of Peace and not officially called a forum since there is no evidence of it serving a political function) which instead contains gardens, fountains and promenades. One ancient account tells us that "all along the roof of the colonnades of Trajan's forum there are placed gilded statues of horses and representations of military standards, and underneath is written Ex manubiis [from money obtained through spoils]" (Aulus Gellius, Attic Nights 13.25.1). Perhaps the message the emperor wished to send was that his rule saw such great military achievement that his successes alone were capable of creating the greatest public architectural space in Rome. Following Trajan's death, Hadrian is reported to have added a colossal temple to the deified Trajan and his wife Plotina (of which very little survives) so that the completed Forum focused not only on Trajan's military victories, but also on his apotheosis.
The magnificence of this complex in comparison to previous imperial fora is emphasised by ancient witnesses, one of whom, when describing the emperor Constantius II's reaction when he first visited Rome in AD 357, says it was "a construction unique under the heavens, as we believe, and admirable even in the unanimous opinion of the gods..." (Ammianus Marcellinus 16.10.15). It was later a space where various important events occurred; Hadrian and Aurelian ordered the burning of notes of debt to the state here (Historia Augusta, Hadrian 7.6, Aurelian 39.3), Marcus Aurelius held a sale of imperial treasures here following a period of war as an alternative to taxing the provinces (Historia Augusta, Marcus Aurelius 17.4) and here laws were frequently fastened up on bronze tablets to be read by the public.
This coin was produced following the dedication of the forum and depicts the magnificent arch commemorating Trajan's victories in Dacia which acted as its entrance. Martin Beckmann (see The Early Gold Coinage of Trajan's Sixth Consulship in The American Journal of Numismatics Vol. 12 (2000), pp. 119-156) argues that it was part of the first production of AD 112 which contained a group of types focusing on commemorating the forum such as depictions of the Basilica Ulpia, and Equus Traiana (the following year saw the production of coins showing the newly built Trajan's Column). His study reveals that there were ten dies for this reverse type and that "from the die links it appears that the forum type carried on strongly, perhaps to the end of the entire series..." implying that significant importance was attached to the promulgation of this great architectural work, the grandest of all imperial fora to date, made possible by the emperor's military victories.

ILLUSTRAZIONE: ESTRAZIONE DI MARMO PER LA COSTRUZIONE DEL FORO DI ADRIANO E SUA RICOSTRUZIONE GRAFICA 

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Classical Numismatic Group, Mail Bid Sale 76, lot 1319, 12/09/2007

Octavian. 30-29 BC. AR Denarius (3.77 g, 2h). Italian (Rome?) mint. Bare head right / Octavian’s Actian arch (arcus Octaviani) surmounted by Octavian in facing triumphal quadriga; IMP CAESAR across architrave. RIC I 267; CRI 422; RSC 123. Good VF, a little porous, tiny edge nick between 11 and 12 o’clock. An important architectural reverse.
This single-span arch celebrating Octavian’s victory at Actium was built on the same site as the triple-span arch, the arcus Augusti. The latter arch, built in 19 BC in celebration of the recovery by Augustus of the famous standards lost by Antony and Crassus, replaced the smaller arch depicted on this coin.
Estimate: $500

ILLUSTRAZIONE: RICOSTRUZIONE DELL'ARCO PARTICO

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Numismatica Ars Classica NAC AG, Auction 49, lot 128, 21/10/2008

An interesting selection of Roman Gold Coins from the B.d.B Collection 
The Roman Empire 
Octavian as Augustus, 27 BC – 14 AD
Aureus, Colonia Patricia July 18 BC – 17/16 BC, 7.82 g. CAESARI – S·P·Q·R·IMP Bare head r. Rev. QV – OD· – VIAE·MVN·SVNT Augustus, veiled, crowned by Victory behind him, standing r. in biga of elephants on square arch between roofed porticoes. Bahrfeldt 191.1 (this coin). C 230. BMC 432 note. RIC 141. CBN 1262. Jameson 20 (this coin). Calicó 262 (this coin). Biaggi 131 (this coin). 
An exceedingly rare variety of an extremely rare and interesting type. 
Struck on a full flan and good very fine
Ex Fellot, Paris 1904, 79 and Adolph Hess 14 April 1954 sales, 225. From the Jameson collection. Augustus not only had a clear understanding of the nature of history, but he was not too modest to record his achievements so his place in history would be appreciated. The main document he penned on this topic is the Res Gestae Divi Avgvsti, ‘The Achievements of the Divine Augustus’, which he entrusted to the Vestal Virgins so that after his death it would be inscribed onto bronze tablets for display in front of his mausoleum. Among the many achievements he lists is construction or rehabilitation of roads. In passage 20.5, Augustus states: “In my seventh consulship I restored the Via Flaminia from the city as far as Ariminum [Rimini], together with all bridges except the Milvian and the Ninucian.” This claim is echoed by Suetonius (Augustus, 30) and by Dio Cassius (LII.22), who notes that Augustus erected arches topped with statues of himself on bridges at either end of the Via Flaminia. As early as 27 B.C., the watershed year in which Augustus entered his seventh consulship, Augustus pressed generals and senators into service by demanding they oversee and pay for the repair of other main roads. The generals were to pay for this with prize money they had taken in their campaigns. This great effort was commemorated with a series of aurei and denarii usually attributed to a Spanish mint striking in the period 18-17 B.C. This aureus, inscribed QVOD VIAE MVN[ITAE] SVNT (“For having caused the highways to be built”), shows Victory crowning Augustus, whom she accompanies in a biga of elephants upon a square arch flanked by roofed porticoes. Other coins from this series show an identical elephant-biga scene on a double-arch upon a viaduct, or on a round central arch flanked by arcades, or show Victory and Augustus in a quadriga of horses on a double-arch adorned with a rostra set upon a viaduct. We might presume these were among the statues mentioned by Dio. Augustus’ concern for road repair was practical, as highways were critical to the success of the empire. Not only were they useful for the transportation of goods and the movement of travelers, but they were essential for the efficiency of the army, which could move at great speed on these superhighways. In the instance commemorated by this aureus, Augustus was thinking ahead since he planned to use the Flaminian Way to move troops into Gaul, where he planned to launch major campaigns that would secure and further Romanize that province.
Estimate: 12000 CHF

ILLUSTRAZIONE: Rilievo Torlonia con raffigurazione di Porto - III sec. d.C.

 

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3 ore fa, King John dice:
Roma Numismatics Limited, Auction 15, lot 546, 5/04/2018

Roman Imperial 
Trajan AV Aureus. Rome, AD 112-113. IMP TRAIANVS AVG GER DAC P M TR P COS VI P P, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right / Frontal view of the hexastyle façade of Trajan's Forum, with central entrance and two alcoves containing statues to either side, an elaborate statue group comprised of facing quadriga between three statues on each side atop the roof; FORVM TRAIAN in exergue. RIC 257; C 168 var. (not cuirassed); Calicó 1031; BMCRE 509; Biaggi 494; Woytek 409f. 7.30g, 19mm, 6h.
Good Extremely Fine. The finest example of this desirable type to have been offered in many years.
Trajan became consul for the sixth and final time on January 1, AD 112; on the same day he dedicated his new Forum complex. It is thought to have been designed by the architect Apollodorus who accompanied Trajan on his campaigns in Dacia and is famous for building a bridge across the Danube river recorded by ancient authors and artists. When complete, the vast complex consisted of the area fori (main square), the Basilica Ulpia, the column of Trajan, and two libraries, all situated adjacent to the Markets of Trajan on one side and the Forum Augustum on another. The project sought to exceed previous imperial fora in plan, scale and ornamentation while focusing directly on Trajan's military achievements in Dacia. Each imperial forum had specific architectural and decorative schemes which created specific ambiences; thus, Trajan's military theme is vastly different from the Forum of Vespasian (also known as the Temple of Peace and not officially called a forum since there is no evidence of it serving a political function) which instead contains gardens, fountains and promenades. One ancient account tells us that "all along the roof of the colonnades of Trajan's forum there are placed gilded statues of horses and representations of military standards, and underneath is written Ex manubiis [from money obtained through spoils]" (Aulus Gellius, Attic Nights 13.25.1). Perhaps the message the emperor wished to send was that his rule saw such great military achievement that his successes alone were capable of creating the greatest public architectural space in Rome. Following Trajan's death, Hadrian is reported to have added a colossal temple to the deified Trajan and his wife Plotina (of which very little survives) so that the completed Forum focused not only on Trajan's military victories, but also on his apotheosis.
The magnificence of this complex in comparison to previous imperial fora is emphasised by ancient witnesses, one of whom, when describing the emperor Constantius II's reaction when he first visited Rome in AD 357, says it was "a construction unique under the heavens, as we believe, and admirable even in the unanimous opinion of the gods..." (Ammianus Marcellinus 16.10.15). It was later a space where various important events occurred; Hadrian and Aurelian ordered the burning of notes of debt to the state here (Historia Augusta, Hadrian 7.6, Aurelian 39.3), Marcus Aurelius held a sale of imperial treasures here following a period of war as an alternative to taxing the provinces (Historia Augusta, Marcus Aurelius 17.4) and here laws were frequently fastened up on bronze tablets to be read by the public.
This coin was produced following the dedication of the forum and depicts the magnificent arch commemorating Trajan's victories in Dacia which acted as its entrance. Martin Beckmann (see The Early Gold Coinage of Trajan's Sixth Consulship in The American Journal of Numismatics Vol. 12 (2000), pp. 119-156) argues that it was part of the first production of AD 112 which contained a group of types focusing on commemorating the forum such as depictions of the Basilica Ulpia, and Equus Traiana (the following year saw the production of coins showing the newly built Trajan's Column). His study reveals that there were ten dies for this reverse type and that "from the die links it appears that the forum type carried on strongly, perhaps to the end of the entire series..." implying that significant importance was attached to the promulgation of this great architectural work, the grandest of all imperial fora to date, made possible by the emperor's military victories.

ILLUSTRAZIONE: ESTRAZIONE DI MARMO PER LA COSTRUZIONE DEL FORO DI ADRIANO E SUA RICOSTRUZIONE GRAFICA 

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Queste monete, queste immagini ci fanno capire che poi le monete erano il giornale dei tempi, registravano i fatti, sicuramente anche come promozione, ma indubbiamente rappresentavano l'epoca di emissione e la raffiguravano.

Io non so voi, ma quando penso a cosa sia la divulgazione numismatica penso anche a discussioni come questa che per fortuna ci sono ancora e che vengono portate avanti tenacemente da grandi testimonial della numismatica come in questo caso sicuramente.

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Ira & Larry Goldberg Coins & Collectibles, Auction 69, lot 3400, 29705/2012

Roman Republic. L. Livineius Regulus, moneyer. AR Denarius minted at Rome, 42 BC
Roman Republic. L. Livineius Regulus, moneyer. AR Denarius minted at Rome, 42 BC. Bare head right of the praetor L. Livineius Regulus. Reverse: Scene depicting combat between gladiators and beasts; above, gladiator right fends off boar and tiger; below, gladiator left attacks lion with spear. Sear 489; Livineia 12; Cr. 494/30; Syd. 1112. Banker's mark behind head of Regulus. Attractively toned. Choice Very Fine and rare. Public spectacles, which included the popular beast fights, were the purview of the
Praefectus Urbi. This reverse type records the moneyer's appointment to the office. Estimated Value $600 - 800. Provenance: The Pat Coyle Collection.

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Classical Numismatic Group, Mail Bid Sale 73, lot 660, 13/09/2006

Elagabalus. AD 218-222. Æ 26mm (10.08 g, 1h). Sidon mint in Phoenicia. Laureate, draped, and cuirassed bust right / Naumachia: two pentekonters parallel, each with multiple oarsmen left; at prow of first, Athena standing right; at stern of second, Marsyas standing left; figure standing left at stern of second pentekonter, attempting to board first; above, image of Astarte; dolphin right in waves. Babelon, Perses 1777; BMC p. cxii-cxiii; AUB -; SNG Copenhagen -. VF, red and green patina. Very rare.
From the Alexandre de Barros Ship Collection. Ex Freeman & Sear 7 (22 February 2002), lot 278.
ANCIENT MARITIME VESSELS ON COINS
Selections From
The Alexandre de Barros Collection
Classical Numismatic Group is pleased to present the Alexandre de Barros collection of ships on ancient coins. Assembled with a view toward creating a broad overview of Greek and Roman ship types, this collection features some of the earliest examples of ships known on coins. Of particular interest is a Phoenician double shekel struck in Sidon in the late fifth century BC, one of the earliest coins to feature a ship. The collection ends with the issues of Carausius and Allectus, the late third century AD British usurpers.
Estimate: $500

ILLUSTRAZIONE: UNA NAUMACHIA, spettacolo in voga nell’antica Roma che consisteva nella simulazione di un combattimento navale. Le naumachie erano organizzate in bacini naturali o artificiali o in edifici appositamente predisposti (anfiteatri e circhi). Rappresentate dall’età di Cesare (la prima nel 46 a.C. in un bacino scavato in Campo Marzio), furono frequenti nel 1° sec. d.C. sotto Claudio (che allestì la più grandiosa nel 52 d.C. sul Lago Fucino, con quasi 20.000 uomini), Nerone, Tito, Domiziano; l’ultima fu organizzata nel 248 d.C. da Filippo l'Arabo per il millenario di Roma.

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Stack's Bowers Galleries (& Ponterio) > January 2019 NYINC Auction    Auction date: 11 January 2019

Lot number: 41057

ANTONINUS PIUS, A.D. 138-161. Egypt. Alexandria. AE Drachm (25.41 gms), RY 5 (A.D. 141/42). NGC VF, Strike: 5/5 Surface: 4/5.
Forschner-580. RARE. Laureate head of Antoninus Pius facing right; Reverse: Reaper standing right harvesting grain. Commemorates Egypt as the breadbasket of the Roman Empire. After the Battle of Actium and the downfall of the Ptolemaic Dynasty, Egypt became an Imperial province. The region had long been a major agricultural power thanks to the climate and gentle flooding of the Nile. This agricultural aptitude led to monetary wealth as well. The Roman governor of Egypt - a personal appointee of the Emperor - used the two or three legions at his disposal to ensure the grain shipments kept the capitol fed. Nice portrait with full legends. Nice even brown patina and quite attractive.

Estimate: $3000.00- $5000.00

ILLUSTRAZIONE: LEGIONARI INTENTI A MIETERE IL GRANO, PARTICOLARE DELLA COLONNA TRAIANA

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Heritage World Coin Auctions > NYINC Signature Sale 3071

Auction date: 6 January 2019   Lot number: 33303

Justinian II, First Reign (AD 685-695). AV solidus (20mm, 4.32 gm, 7h). NGC MS 3/5 - 4/5, clipped. Constantinople, 6th officina, AD 692-695. IhS CRISΤDS RЄX-RЄΣNANΤIЧM, facing half-length bust of Christ with long hair and full beard, wearing pallium and colobium, cross behind head, raising right hand in benediction, book of Gospels cradled in left arm / D IЧSTINI-AN-ЧS SERЧ CHRISΤI C, full-length figure of Justinian II standing facing, wearing crown and loros, cross potent on steps in right hand and akakia in left; CONOP below. Sear 1248.
The portrait of Christ on the obverse of this solidus is the first numismatic representation of Jesus, and immediately followed the ruling of the Trullan Synod of AD 692 that Christ could be depicted in human form. Justinian II was ostentatiously devout and placing the divine image on his coinage was a reflection of this. The image is remarkably naturalistic and lifelike, and was likely based on the mosaic image of Christ in the apse of the Great Palace of Constantinople, which was itself influenced by Hellenistic depictions of Zeus. Some scholars have argued that Justinian's choice to produce this new type came in response to the Umayyad caliph 'Abd al-Malik's minting of Byzantine-style solidi bearing the Islamic statement of faith (the shahada) in AD 692, which he used in payment of tribute to the Emperor prior to the eruption of the Battle of Sebastopolis the same year. 
Estimate: 2500-3500 USD

ILLUSTRAZIONE: MOSAICO RAFFIGURANTE IL CRISTO PANTOCRATORE, HAGIA SOFIA (ISTANBUL).

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LHS Numismatik AG, Auction 102, lot 91, 29/04/2008

Sicily
Sicily, Syracuse
Estimate: CHF 1'000.00
Litra (Silver, 0.81 g 5), c. 410-405. [] Head of Arethusa to right, wearing simple pendant earring and with her hair in an ampyx; behind her head, dolphin swimming downwards to right. Rev. Octopus. Bérend, KME pl. VI, 16 (same dies). Rizzo pl. XLVII, 14 (same dies). SNG ANS 282 (same dies, = KME pl. VI, 14). SNG Oxford (same dies). Very rare. Of lovely style. Extremely fine.
From the Star collection, ex Münzen und Medaillen 79, 28 February 1994, 182 and from the R.A. van Every collection, Bank Leu 15, 4 May 1976, 116. This piece is yet another ‘minor´ masterpiece, with a lovely head of Arethusa and a very lively octopus, shown with his two central tentacles entwined with each other.

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Heritage World Coin Auctions > NYINC Signature Sale 3071 Auction date: 6 January 2019
Lot number: 32302

 
 

Lot description:
Ancients
Galla Placidia, Western Roman Empire (AD 421-450). AV solidus (21mm, 4.45 gm, 5h). NGC Choice XF 5/5 - 4/5. Rome, AD 421. D N GALLA PLA-CIDIA P F AVG, pearl-diademed and draped bust of Placidia right, wearing necklace and pendant earrings, chi-rho on right shoulder, hand of God reaching down from above with wreath to crown her / VOT XX-MVLT XXX, Victory standing left holding long jeweled cross in right hand; star above, R-M in fields, COMOB in exergue. RIC X 2007. Depeyrot 45/2. Very rare.
From the Morris Collection.
The daughter of Theodosius I, Galla Placidia was born in AD 392 and proved to be a much more formidable character than her weakling brothers, Honorius and Arcadius. She would need such fortitude for, following the siege of Rome in 408-410, she was captured and held hostage by Visigoths. Whether by coercion or choice, she soon wed Atualf, son and successor of King Alaric. Perhaps she hoped the wedding would spur a modus vivendi between Roman and Barbarian, but if so her hopes were dashed by the murder of Ataulf in AD 416. A swap of hostages returned her to the Western Roman court, and in AD 417 Honorius married her off to the elderly general Constantius III, later briefly co-Emperor of the West. Although the union was not a happy one, it did produce a son and daughter. After the death of Constantius in AD 421, Honorius began to show a strange, incestuous attraction to his sister and she fled to the East Roman court of Theodosius II. When Honorius died in AD 423 and the Western throne was usurped by Johannes, Placidia returned with a sizeable army to depose the usurper in favor of her five-year-old son, who was duly installed as Valentinian III. She remained in Italy, ruling the Western Empire as regent until her son came of age, and played a major role in political and religious affairs until her death in AD 450. Her mausoleum in Ravenna is a masterpiece of early Medieval architecture and is a UNESCO World Heritage site. 
Estimate: 5000-7000 USD

illustrazione: Alarico entra a Roma (410 d.C.)

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Numismatica Ars Classica NAC AG, Auction 106, lot 387, 9/05/2018

The Roman Republic 
T. Didius. Denarius 113 or 112, AR 3.96 g. Helmeted head of Roma r.; behind, ROMA in monogram. Below neck truncation, Ú. Rev. Fight between two gladiators; in exergue, T·DEIDI. Babelon Didia 2. Sydenham 550. RBW 1134. Crawford 294/1.
In exceptional condition for the issue. Struck in high relief and with a
light tone. Virtually as struck and almost Fdc

 

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Passerà il prossimo 08-01-2019 in asta CNG Triton XXII al lotto 13, un raro nomos di Taranto con cavalleggero armato di  elmo, scudo e giavellotti .

Particolare lo scudo rotondo, decorato con quel delfino che è parte dell'emblema cittadino di Taranto .

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The New York Sale, Auction XIV, lot 27, 10/01/2007

GREEK COINS
SICILY
CAMARINA.
No.: 27
Estimate: $ 450
d=14 mm
CAMARINA. Litra, about 461-440 BC. AR 0.77 g. Nike flying l., wearing long chiton; at her feet, swan l.; whole in laurel wreath. Rev. KAMARINAION Athena standing l., wearing long chiton, aegis and crested helmet, holding spear with her r. hand; shield leaning at her r. side; whole in linear circle. U. Westermark - G. K. Jenkins, The Coinage of Kamarina (1980), 147, 17. SNG ANS 1212. Large flan. Light tone. Insignificant weakness on obv.
Extremely fine
Ex Dr. A. Moretti coll.

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Leu Numismatik AG > Web Auction 6 Auction date: 9 December 2018
Lot number: 1009
Price realized: 150 CHF   (Approx. 151 USD / 133 EUR)   Note: Prices do not include buyer's fees.
 

Lot description:
Septimius Severus, 193-211. Denarius (Silver, 18 mm, 3.34 g, 6 h), Rome, 193. IMP CAE L SEP SEV PERT AVG Laureate head of Septimius Severus to right. Rev. LEG XI C L / TR P COS Legionary eagle flanked by two standards. BMC 16. Cohen 268. RIC 12. Nicely toned and unusually attractive for this issue. Nearly extremely fine.
From a German collection of Roman Denarii, formed in the 1980s to early 2000s.
Starting Price: 100 CHF

ILLUSTRAZIONE: UOMINI DELLA LEGIO XI CLAUDIA

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Bertolami Fine Arts - ACR Auctions > E-Auction 64 Auction date: 13 January 2019
Lot number: 626
 
 
Lot description:
Roman Pb Tessera, c. 1st century BC - 1st century AD (19mm, 2.96g, 12h). Warrior standing r., holding spear and leaning on shield. R/ Dog or wolf leaping r.; below, TPA. VF
Starting Price: 30 GBP

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Classical Numismatic Group > Triton XXII Auction date: 8 January 2019
Lot number: 14

 
 
Lot description:
CALABRIA, Tarentum. Circa 280 BC. AR Nomos (21mm, 7.91 g, 6h). Warrior, nude but for crested helmet, wearing shield on left arm and holding spear in left hand, on horse prancing left; to left, Nike standing facing, restraining horse with both hands; [ΛYKIΣKOΣ below] / Phalanthos, nude, extending his right arm, wearing shield inscribed E on his left arm and holding two spears in his left hand, astride dolphin left; TAPAΣ and ZOP to left, waves below. Vlasto 680 (same dies); HN Italy 963; SNG ANS 1056-8; SNG Lloyd 197; SNG BN 1874-6; Gillet 107 (same dies); Pozzi 357-8. Choice EF, lovely old cabinet tone. Very well centered and struck for issue. 
Ex Triton XVIII (6 January 2015), lot 315; Numismatica Genevensis SA V (2 December 2008), lot 3; Tkalec (19 February 2001), lot 3.
Estimate: 5000 USD

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Roma Numismatics Limited, Auction 16, lot 529, 26/09/2018

Roman Republic 
L. Manlius Torquatus AR Denarius. Rome, 113-112 BC. Helmeted head of Roma right; ROMA downwards behind, X below chin, all within torque / Helmeted horseman galloping left, holding spear and shield; Q above, L•TORQVA below, EX•S•C in exergue. Crawford 295/1; RSC Manlia 25. 3.92g, 20mm, 7h.
Extremely Fine; unusually complete and well-centred for the issue.
Ex private Spanish collection.

ILLUSTRAZIONE: Delphi (Grecia), II sec. a.C., fregio del monumento alla vittoria di Pidna dedicato a Lucio Emilio Paolo. 

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Figura 6. Delphi (Grecia), II sec. a.C., fregio del monumento alla vittoria di Pidna dedicato a Lucio Emilio Paolo. Sulla sinistra è mostrato un soldato romano con scutum, sulla destra un cavaliere macedone. [fonte della.jpg

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Classical Numismatic Group > Electronic Auction 424 Auction date: 11 July 2018
Lot number: 44
Price realized: 605 USD   (Approx. 516 EUR)   Note: Prices do not include buyer's fees.
 

Lot description:
KINGS of THRACE, Odrysian. Seuthes III. Circa 330/25-295 BC. Æ (20mm, 5.26 g, 11h). Seuthopolis mint. Bearded head of Seuthes right / Horseman riding right; wreath below. Dimitrov Type 7; Peykov B3810; HGC 3, 1713. Good VF, dark green patina. Choice for issue.
Ex Lanz 151 (30 June 2011), lot 331 (hammer €600).
Estimate: 300 USD

ILLUSTRAZIONE: THRACIAN BRONZE HEAD OF SEUTHES III, LATE 4TH-EARLY 3RD CENTURY BC

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Heritage World Coin Auctions > NYINC Signature Sale 3072 Auction date: 15 January 2019
Lot number: 35025  

CALABRIA. Tarentum. Punic occupation by Hannibal (ca. 212-209 BC). AR half shekel (19mm, 3.87 gm, 6h). NGC MS 4/5 - 4/5. Second Punic War, Punic occupation of Sicily by Hannibal. Sokannas, magistrate. Warrior on horseback right, holding palm tied with fillet over shoulder SΩKAN-NAS below / Phalanthos astride dolphin swimming left, holding kantharos and trident; behind, eagle with wings displayed standing left, TAPAΣ below. Vlasto 984. HN Italy 1082.
Estimate: 1000-1200 USD

illustrazione: lastra tombale affrescata (Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Paestum).

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Bertolami Fine Arts - ACR Auctions > E-Auction 64 Auction date: 13 January 2019
Lot number: 26
 
 

Southern Apulia, Tarentum, c. 344-340 BC. AR Nomos (21mm, 7.77g, 3h). Warrior, wearing helmet and holding shield, on horseback r.; |- below. R/ Phalanthos, holding kantharos, on dolphin l.; below, Π above waves. Vlasto 448; HNItaly 890. Graffiti and small metal-flaw on rev., VF
Starting Price: 60 GBP

ILLUSTRAZIONE: LASTRA TOMBALE AFFRESCATA (MUSEO ARCHEOLOGICO NAZIONALE, PAESTUM)

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