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Need Help With Ancient 2 | Antoninus Pius Egyptian Bronze

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ziggy9's Avatar
United States
499 Posts
 Posted 11/12/2009  9:22 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add ziggy9 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
this coin is 32 mm

Need-Help-With-Ancient-2-|-Antoninus-Pius-Egyptian-Bronze

Need-Help-With-Ancient-2-|-Antoninus-Pius-Egyptian-Bronze

Thanks
Richard

Identified (finally!) - moved to Ancients forum - Sap
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echizento's Avatar
United States
23731 Posts
 Posted 11/12/2009  9:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Looks like the Emperor Antoninus Pius, 138-161 AD.
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Sap's Avatar
Australia
16857 Posts
 Posted 01/22/2010  06:52 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
This coin has the typical trapezoidal cross-section of an Egyptian bronze coin - apparently, the blanks were cast into this shape prior to being struck. At 32mm, this one is likely to be the denomination Sear calls a "hemidrachm" but Wildwinds calls a "drachm" (nomenclature for Romano-Egyptian coinage is still uncertain).

I've finally managed to track down the ID of this one: the figure on the reverse is identified as Isis Euploia (the Egyptian goddess Isis, in her role as protector of the voyages of ships) standing holding ears of grain and a ship's rudder; to the left is a ship under sail; to the right is the prow of another ship; below the two ships recline a female figure and a male figure (the male figure represents the Nile River, while the female symbolizes the sea). This example on the Ashmolean Museum website is dated Year 18 of Antoninus Pius, or 154-155 AD. It's listed in the millennium Sear catalogue as number 4454, though Sear identifies the central figure as Tyche rather than Isis.

Sear adds a comment that this coin is meant to symbolize the fact that Alexandria was both a major seaport and a major river port; it was the New Orleans of the ancient world.

CV in Sear is $110 in Fine. Even in this condition, it's still better than your average scratchtray find.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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