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Show Us Your Top 10 Coins Of 2019

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pepactonius's Avatar
United States
9395 Posts
 Posted 12/28/2019  7:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pepactonius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
(#4) Duchy of Brabant / Antwerp -- 2 stuivers/double briquet, 1479:
Show-Us-Your-Top-10-Coins-Of-2019
Show-Us-Your-Top-10-Coins-Of-2019

(Levinson II-38)

According to Levinson, Legend: SALVA FAC PPLM-TVV DNE A 1479 -and- MARIA DEI G DVCISS BG BR Z LI.
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Palouche's Avatar
Spain
2752 Posts
 Posted 12/29/2019  5:17 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Palouche to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
@pepactonius...Thanks for the legend description...Lovely coin and must say your photographic skills are really good!...Really interesting how the letters and numbers on medieval coins are so different!...I probably would have got the 1 and 9 of the date but the 4 and 7 ....Thanks for sharing.. Paul
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Numis-Northerner's Avatar
Canada
857 Posts
 Posted 12/29/2019  5:35 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Numis-Northerner to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
(#4) Duchy of Brabant / Antwerp -- 2 stuivers/double briquet, 1479:


I know that the number '4' on coins from the 1400s tend to look different , but why did they use an Arabic number '7' in the date?



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pepactonius's Avatar
United States
9395 Posts
 Posted 12/29/2019  7:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pepactonius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
but why did they use an Arabic number '7' in the date?


Isn't that an Arabic "8" in the date?
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pepactonius's Avatar
United States
9395 Posts
 Posted 12/29/2019  7:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pepactonius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
(#5) Duchy of Brabant / Antwerp -- 1 demi briquet, 1476:
Show-Us-Your-Top-10-Coins-Of-2019
Show-Us-Your-Top-10-Coins-Of-2019

(Levinson II-24)

Legends:

KAROL DI GRA DX BG BR Z LI - lion
BENEDIC AIA MEA DNO [A?] 1476 -- flowery wreath on short cross
Edited by pepactonius
12/30/2019 1:38 pm
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Numis-Northerner's Avatar
Canada
857 Posts
 Posted 12/29/2019  8:01 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Numis-Northerner to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:

Isn't that an Arabic "8" in the date?


Yes, my bad, wouldn't that mean the coin is from 1489, not 1479?
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pepactonius's Avatar
United States
9395 Posts
 Posted 12/29/2019  8:48 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pepactonius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Yes, my bad, wouldn't that mean the coin is from 1489, not 1479?


The Levinson book actually gives the legends with modern letters, but the old-fashioned numerals, so this is definitely 1479. Also, the "8" from this era looks like a modern "8" -- you can look at the 1482 coin I posted earlier.
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pepactonius's Avatar
United States
9395 Posts
 Posted 12/30/2019  9:26 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pepactonius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
(#6) Electorate of Saxony / Margraviate of Meissen / Leipzig -- 1 spitzgroschen, 1475:
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Show-Us-Your-Top-10-Coins-Of-2019

(Levinson I-148)

Inscriptions:

GROSSUS NOVUS MARCH HIS 75

E W A D G DUCS SAX TV L HAR HS
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Novicius's Avatar
United Kingdom
1168 Posts
 Posted 12/31/2019  11:52 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Novicius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The last coins of 2019, and getting out of my comfort zone.
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CONSTANTINE X Dukas & Evdokia follis. Constantinople 1059-1067 AD. Obverse: Christ standing facing on footstool, wearing nimbus and holding Gospels, IC XC across fields. Obverse Inscription: +EMMA NOVHA. Reverse: Eudocia on left, wearing loros with kite-shaped lower panel and crown with cross and pendilia; Constantine on right, wearing loros and crown with cross and pendilia, both standing facing, holding labarum with cross-piece on shaft between them, standing on base and three steps, each places one hand on heart. Reverse Inscription: EVDKARO +KWNTAK. Diameter: 32 mm.
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MAURICE TIBERIUS follis. Cyzicus 584-585 AD. Obverse: Helmeted cuirassed bust facing. Obverse Inscription: ON MAVRIC TIbER PP A. Reverse: Large M, ANNO in left field, cross above, III (regnal year 3rd) in right field, A (officina) below. Exergue: KYZ. Diameter: 32 mm.
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TIBERIUS II Constantine follis. Constantinople 580-581 AD. Obverse: Crowned bust facing wearing consular robes and holding mappa and eagle-tipped scepter. Obverse Inscription: DN TIb CON-STANT PP AVI. Reverse: Large m (lower case), ANNO in left field , cross above, GI (regnal year 7th) in right field, CONA in exergue. Diameter: 31 mm.
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Kamnaskires's Avatar
United States
7066 Posts
 Posted 12/31/2019  12:30 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Kamnaskires to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Some honest wear and lots of character. Nice set of Byzantine folles.

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Palouche's Avatar
Spain
2752 Posts
 Posted 12/31/2019  12:37 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Palouche to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
@pepactonius....Some great coins...Thanks for the legend descriptions as I'm beginning to recognise the lettering and numbers now....How many coins did you acquire of your 15th century collection this year?

@Novicius...Nice coins Jim but I'm drowning with you in the deep end! I haven't touched on Byzantine coins yet but I do like the look of the Tiberius II coin...Nice additions......

Paul
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pepactonius's Avatar
United States
9395 Posts
 Posted 12/31/2019  8:37 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pepactonius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
..How many coins did you acquire of your 15th century collection this year?


I got a total of 11 coins from the 1400s this year -- just enough to select a top-10 list, omitting the worst one (a spitzgroschen from 1477).
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pepactonius's Avatar
United States
9395 Posts
 Posted 12/31/2019  8:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pepactonius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
(#7) Juanpur Sultanate -- BI tanka, AH 878 = 1473-1474 AD:
Show-Us-Your-Top-10-Coins-Of-2019
Show-Us-Your-Top-10-Coins-Of-2019

This is Goron & Goenka J27 or Rajgor 2737. G&G gives the transliterated full inscription for both sides, if you are interested, but no translation.

The only thing of interest to me on this coin is the date at 7:00 on the 1st image. Usually, these dates are partly or completely off the flan.

Mainly, this coin fills the 1473 gap in the "How far back can we go, 5th edition" thread.
Edited by pepactonius
12/31/2019 9:00 pm
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Novicius's Avatar
United Kingdom
1168 Posts
 Posted 12/31/2019  10:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Novicius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
@Bob L Thanks Bob, the Byzantine coins do have a lot of character, and a kind of naive beauty that I am very attracted to.

@Palouche I know what you are saying Paul, and I'm getting further away from the late Roman coins that I feel reasonably comfortable with. Instead of concentrating on one subject, I'm finding myself getting into a wider and wider field, and knowing less about more! "Drowning" is a very apt description!
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tdziemia's Avatar
United States
7953 Posts
 Posted 01/01/2020  11:00 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tdziemia to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
I know that the number '4' on coins from the 1400s tend to look different , but why did they use an Arabic number '7' in the date?


If you look at @pepactonius nice 1475 coin posted 12/30, you'll see that the late 15th c. 5 looks like a 7. The 7 looks like an inverted V, and the 4 looks like an inverted Greek gamma (between then and 30 to 50 years later, the 5 will grow a hat, the 7 will rotate 45 degrees clockwise, the 4 will rotate 45 degrees counterclockwise).

That should make it all perfectly clear
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