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Would This Be A Good Buy?

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Pillar of the Community
United States
549 Posts
 Posted 01/10/2013  9:05 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add augustus1 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
It is an extremely common AE3 type of Valens. See type 6 on this site:
http://esty.ancients.info/ricix/

They were not surface silvered. The silvery look must be an artifact of the photography. The flan chip at 11:00 is a big negative. Long ago I saw cigar boxes full of AE3s of this period -- thousands of them. It is one of the most common Roman types of all. It might be worth $5 but one without the flan flaw would not cost much more. A super EF well centered and bold coud be a lot more, maybe $40. But, in my opinion, this coin is not worth anywhere near £20.
New Member
Australia
5 Posts
 Posted 01/11/2013  05:41 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cerberuscoins to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Hi

The coin looks like it may have sat in a mount for jewellery. Its difficult to see anything from those pictures. Maybe easier if they took the images outside. There a seller in Australia (not me) who coats roman coins in silver and another person who makes silver reproductions of roman coins. Without a better picture its hard to tell whether your coin is silver, silvered or perhaps has been coated for jewellery purposes in silver. It looks like there is bronze on Valens cheek which would indicate to me it has had a silver wash.
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Masis's Avatar
United Kingdom
946 Posts
 Posted 01/11/2013  08:47 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Masis to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
It does not look like a Siliqua, not the reverse design anyway.
The tone of the photo, the dark grey, gives the impression of it being silver.
I reckon it is an AE (copper alloy). Certainly, as Gil-galad states, the workshop insignias may make it rare, but for even £10 you could buy a reasonable AR Denarius.

Siscia is THE MOST COMMON mint of the "SECVRITAS REIPVBLICAE" type for Valens and his brother Valentinian I.
It was only an AE issue.

However, those from the Rome mint (R● SECVNDA, R●TERTIA) seem to fetch a high price.
For example, the below photo is of a Valens "SECVRITAS REIPVBLICAE" I sold to a buyer from Italy last year by auction, it went for £25.


Would-This-Be-A-Good-Buy?
Edited by Masis
01/11/2013 11:59 am
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bobbyhelmet's Avatar
United Kingdom
2838 Posts
 Posted 01/11/2013  09:46 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobbyhelmet to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
I sold to an a buyer from Italy last year by auction, it went for £25.


Blimey - good result!

I also have a tertia marked Valens somewhere, it was one of the first I ever bought as a kid from a bargain bin
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Masis's Avatar
United Kingdom
946 Posts
 Posted 01/11/2013  12:06 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Masis to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Blimey - good result!


That is what I thought at the time as well!

Auctions are a minefield for us sellers, as coins we think will sell poorly, if at all, go for a higher than expected price, and then coins of quality, like a fine ancient Greek AE, go for around £1.

Below is a photo of the example I mean, an ancient Greek AE from Amphipolis, that only sold for £1.71 a couple of months ago! The bronze itself was worth more than that!

Would-This-Be-A-Good-Buy?
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