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Replies: 17 / Views: 2,094 |
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New Member
Canada
8 Posts |
Hello. I inherited this coin and would appreciate any information on it. Thanks  
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Moderator
 United States
23731 Posts |
 to the community Greek coins are not my area, but we have several knowledgeable Greek coin collectors here that I'm sure will be able to answer your question. Just wanted to welcome you to the group.
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New Member
 Canada
8 Posts |
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Valued Member
Canada
472 Posts |
Is the coin silver ? What is the diameter and weight (if possible) ?
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New Member
 Canada
8 Posts |
Yes it is silver. It's 17mm. I don't have a weight as of yet.
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Valued Member
Canada
472 Posts |
Edited by Dionysos 11/28/2012 11:03 am
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New Member
 Canada
8 Posts |
As you pointed out it's not in the best condition and it's not identical but perhaps in 265 BC without machinery no two coins were identical? It's not something I would even consider of selling. But wow, I'm thrilled to have this. Thanks so much for the information
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Valued Member
Canada
472 Posts |
Quote: it's not identical but perhaps in 265 BC without machinery no two coins were identical?
Two identical ancient coins would definitely not be a good sign 
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2838 Posts |
'One of Eleven Known'  Good find Dionysos  Welcome to the forum clwguy, despite its condition you still have a very desirable and interesting coin  Difficult to convert rarity and desirability directly to value but this coin should not be started on ebay for $0.99 if you know what I mean! Always nice to see something rare 
Edited by bobbyhelmet 11/28/2012 12:55 pm
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New Member
 Canada
8 Posts |
Yeah I saw that One of Eleven. Even more reason why I want to keep it. I'm not interested in selling it. How would I confirm that that is the coin?
Thanks Dionysos for your help on this
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Valued Member
Canada
472 Posts |
That's the coin... If you want something written, you could sent it to David Sear who will authenticate it and send it back with a full attribution.
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New Member
 Canada
8 Posts |
I definitely would like to have it authenticated. Thanks
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Valued Member
Canada
472 Posts |
http://www.davidrsear.com/He's in the US. Since you're in Canada you could send it to me, but there's no guarantee that I will send it back  .
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
4208 Posts |
Holy Hecks! What a coin! 11 becomes 12 - its condition means its not worth $14.5k but its still worth quite a lot I reckon. Oh - and as you've got an unregistered example - that makes it 1 of 12 of these known. I dont think that will devalue it at all though.
I think its an obverse die match to the CNG one, but the reverse is definitely a different die.
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New Member
 Canada
8 Posts |
LOL, Dionysos. Send me your address!!
I think it's going to go into the bank vault for now. But I'm pretty excited regardless.
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2838 Posts |
Well, Dionysos knows his Greek coins so I'm certain he is correct on this. That is really all the evidence needed for us and you to know what it is. It may however be worth getting the coin appraised by a professional service (I think what you were implying) for the future just incase you ever decide to part with it or even leave it to somebody else. It would be a shame if it became an 'un-known Greek' again and found its way onto ebay to be sold for buttons. If you did this you would also get a nice 'certificate' to go with the coin, always cool to show to other people. I dont really know Greek coins but for Romans David R Sear offers the kind of service I would recommend for about $50. Hopefully one of our Greek collectors can let us know if a similar service exists for Greeks and if they think it is worth the expense  Rarity is an odd thing with ancient coins, most beginners and non-collectors think everything is rare as they are so old, as you continue collecting you realise that probably 99.9% of ancients are not that rare at all, all different, all beautiful but not that rare. I would put your coin in the remaining 0.1% that is truly rare, not many ancient collectors have these coins and they are very difficult to find for sale. Valuing these coins is even harder, almost impossible to be honest, if you sold your coin as an 'Un-known Greek' ending at 4am on a Tuesday on ebay you may only get $0.99 for it. Sold through a 'proper, bricks and mortar' Greek coin auction house who might be able to find two collectors who knew about this coin and its rarity then even in this condition you might be surprised what a collector would be prepared to pay for it. Look forward to hearing what the Greekophiles think 
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Replies: 17 / Views: 2,094 |