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Half Roman Coin, Info Please

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 Posted 03/11/2014  06:51 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add mashisback to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Thought I would post this mainly for an understanding, but also any info on coin.

I seen a post a little while ago about a purchase of half coins similar to this.
I got the impression (I may be wrong) that a coin in half doesn't as such mean its been damaged in the ground or by the finder.
Did romans have half coins/brake coins in half for a reason?
Is there a certain name for these coins or is it a typical kind of coin this was done with?

The coin I have pictured is quite a big/ strong coin, one which I would think of as quite a display piece if was in one piece.

Pictures below, reasonably detail on one side (head/obverse), the other side looks like loads of decent detail, not sure of the name of it but 'sticks out from the coin surface' but too much going on I cant work out if it is detail or just bumpy,
On this subject, some coins I see (more silver?) have very good 'sticking out' detail, what is the name or term for this?

Any info on coin or the above is appreciated



Half-Roman-Coin,-Info-Please

Half-Roman-Coin,-Info-Please

Half-Roman-Coin,-Info-Please
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echizento's Avatar
United States
23731 Posts
 Posted 03/11/2014  07:01 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
From what I can tell the face looks like Decentius.
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 Posted 03/11/2014  7:13 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ben to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
More likely to be Magnentius. This is a damaged coin - Magnentius Coinage was destroyed when he rebellion was crushed - melted down. Some tribes in East Anglia cut up his folles into minims and put a punch through his eye to darn his memory to allow the coinage to continue to circulate.

2 things about the state of the coin - 1, the cut isn't straight, all cut coinage is cut in straight lines, 2, the edge of the cut is damaged, this means it could be very recent - an ancient cut would have a patina over it. if it does have patina, this just measn the damage isn't recent - it oculd have been hit by a medieval plough.
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echizento's Avatar
United States
23731 Posts
 Posted 03/11/2014  7:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Both Magnentius and Decentius looked somewhat similar on their coinage. My first impression was Magnentius but the longer I looked at it the more it looked like Decentius IMO. The coin IMO is too corroded to make a 100% identification so either one is probably going to be the closes we come to an ID.

The halving of the coin was not caused by a cut but more likely a break along a fault by natural means or being struck by an object. This too is a best guess situation.
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