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Help Identifying Bronze

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 Posted 08/27/2020  8:08 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Spence to your friends list

Quote:
tried searching all iterations of "large A N"


I spent some time looking this afternoon but have found nothing.
"If you climb a good tree, you get a push."
-----Ghanaian proverb

"The danger we all now face is distinguishing between what is authentic and what is performed."
-----King Adz
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 Posted 08/27/2020  8:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list
The coin reminds me of a Roman Republic bronze, it could be a Janus type with the left facing bust tooled away. The bust does appear to be tooled especially at the back of the head forming a cap. The reverse image looks like it might be a galley.
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 Posted 08/27/2020  9:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add louisvillekyshop to your friends list
echizento;

Assuming someone did tool a cap, what type of cap were they trying to make? Middle ages perhaps? The artist doing the tooling might have had an imagine in mind common to them and their experience I suppose.
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 Posted 08/27/2020  9:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DirtyHarry to your friends list
Hi! First of all let me say thank you to all of you for sharing your knowledge and time :)

Going back to the coin... I also tried hard to pin this one down, but I don't know exactly where to begin searching.
The coin certainly looks odd... but it also does "look" ancient, although I wouldn't venture to say it is genuine or not.

Hispania feels like a great guess, but sadly I have minimal information about their coinage.
Begginer's question: Besides Greek and Latin... which other alphabets may contain the letters "A" and "N"?
Is it possible to see this in ancient Iberian coinage? I have no idea!
Edited by DirtyHarry
08/27/2020 10:18 pm
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 Posted 08/27/2020  9:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Kamnaskires to your friends list
My first thought is similar to Ron's. At this scale, I wonder if someone had the remains of a worn down, large Republican AE (Aes Grave Semis?) and simply went to town on it, creating mostly new imagery from what remained. (Like turning a prow into Noah's ark?!) Maybe there's an actual match out there, but I'm pretty sure I've never seen anything like it.

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 Posted 08/27/2020  9:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DirtyHarry to your friends list

Quote:
it could be a Janus type with the left facing bust tooled away


Great guess also. That's the fear I have... that it may have been tooled a lot, making the id more difficult :(
Edited by DirtyHarry
08/27/2020 10:20 pm
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 Posted 08/27/2020  9:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add louisvillekyshop to your friends list
Yeah but Bob, why the giant "A N"? That denotes a group and if this is intentionally created, is that supposed to be a boat? So what is the style of dress with that cap and what group is by the water who might have had access to an old worn Republic? That leads us to middle ages Italy perhaps? I believe we can do more for the item to help the owner understand it. So the stippling might be intentional to create a false background over an old image as well?
Help-Identifying-Bronze
Edited by louisvillekyshop
08/27/2020 9:51 pm
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 Posted 08/27/2020  10:02 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add louisvillekyshop to your friends list
Notice also that the "boat" you can see inside. 3-D imagery is not that common in old coin galleys in my opinion.
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 Posted 08/28/2020  10:02 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Kamnaskires to your friends list

Quote:
Notice also that the "boat" you can see inside.


I dunno, Joe. My gut tells me the "inside" is a remnant of the worn, original image. I suppose the ellipse of the "boat" could be a bow, sort of like in this much smaller Pantikapaion issue:
https://www.acsearch.info/search.html?id=7166167
https://www.acsearch.info/search.html?id=3318106

[I'm not suggesting in any way that the OP coin is an issue of Pantikapaion although, coincidentally, they did often abbreviate ΠΑΝΤΙΚΑΠΑΙΤΩΝ as ΠΑΝ (but not "AN") on the reverses of their coinage]

For now I still lean toward it being a creative reinvention of a worn, large, perhaps Roman AE. Maybe someone will chime in with an ID, though.
Edited by Kamnaskires
08/28/2020 10:12 am
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 Posted 08/28/2020  12:12 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Kushanshah to your friends list
Though I rarely disagree with the insightful Bob_L, I will suggest that the object in question is in fact a coin of Pantikapaion that has been tooled into something (almost) completely new. Note the bulbous nose, beard, [Π]AN, and "boat" with lines similar to a bow or bowcase.
Edited by Kushanshah
08/28/2020 2:42 pm
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 Posted 08/28/2020  12:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Gincoin43 to your friends list
I had been getting a viking vibe from that helmet, which of course doesn't fit, perhaps the reverse was once the bow arrow and club from Etruria, they have some coins with "A N" in the legend, or the "artist" was in deed trying to make a "viking" coin and didn't realize their a and N are two different mints.
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 Posted 08/28/2020  3:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list
Been looking through Crawford to see if any Roman AS used AN above the Galley, haven't found any so that would exclude that.

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 Posted 08/28/2020  3:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Kamnaskires to your friends list

Quote:
so that would exclude that.


Unless the AN is a post-minting creation too. But, when in doubt, the smart bet is always with Kushanshah.
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 Posted 08/28/2020  11:48 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list
That's true.
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 Posted 08/29/2020  01:33 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add louisvillekyshop to your friends list
Well if it is a helmet, and not just a cap, they might have been trying to depict this one?

Sallet (1471-1499)

Open face sallet with applied gilt copper-alloy border. Attributed to Domenico dei Barini detto Negroli
Place: Italy, Milan


Help-Identifying-Bronze

From:

https://collections.royalarmouries....ect-487.html
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