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Roman Gold Coins

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Between 211 and202 BCE, the Romans defeated Carthage in the Second Punic War, took over the gold mining region of Spain, and minted their first gold coins.

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  7. Gold Roman Coins For Sale

But it wasn't until Caesar returned from his victories in the Gallic wars with enough gold to issue 200 coins to each of his soldiers, and pay off the Roman Debt, that the aureus came into wide circulation.

The gold coin is very rare, and this set off a bidding war that smashed the auctioneer's estimate for the piece and set new records, finally being sold for £552,000 (US$700,000). It is the most money ever paid for a coin depicting Allectus and the most valuable Roman coin minted in Britain to have been sold at auction. The solidus was reintroduced by Constantine I (r. 306–337) in 312 AD, permanently replacing the aureus as the gold coin of the Roman Empire. The solidus was struck at a rate of 72 to a Roman pound of pure gold, each coin weighing twenty-four Greco-Roman carats, or about 4.5 grams of gold per coin. Standard gold coin of the Roman Empire. First issued regularly under Julius Caesar around 46 B.C. Although it was reduced in weight, through time, the gold content remained consistently high. The Aureus circulated until A.D. 309 when Constantine the Great replaced it.

Originally, at about 8 grams, the aureus was comparable to the stater in weight; and one aureus was a month's pay for a legionaire.

Coinage also served as the Empire's newspaper, as each issue served notice as to who was in charge, what they looked like, their military accomplishments, conquests, public building projects, and religious honors.

As the Empire expanded, Rome was able to acquire gold from West Africa, Macedon, the Bosporus region and the Zagrean Mountains. At the same time, Rome was able to export a stable monetary system as well as a network of relatively safe highways and shipping routes that promoted an era of prosperous world trade.

The history of these ancient and medieval Gold coins will provide lasting value to your Precious Metals portfolio. You can own rare Gold coins struck as early as 344 B.C. Or the Byzantine reign of Rome. Roman Empire Gold Coins Roman coinage can be divided into two parts: The Roman Republic of 225-27 BC and The Roman Empire of 27 BC-AD 476. The coins of the Roman Empire began with the first Emperor Augustus on the obverse in 41 BC, with the primary coins being the Silver Denarius and the bronze.

By the time of Constantine, after many reforms and debasments, the areus weighed slightly more than half its original weight and was replaced with the Solidus at about 4.5 grams. The solidus (fine gold) retained it's status as the world's trade coin for the next 500 years.

Ancient Roman and Greek Coins: Educational pages
Table of Contents: (Click the images to go to the pages)


Answers to Frequently Asked Questions
Beginners, begin here with the FAQ page
This coin: A common silver denarius of the Roman emperor Septimus Severus, 193-211 AD
Associated pages about buying on eBay, about buying, about selling.
For beginners who ask 'What should I collect?'
Three pages which are especially important for those who have collected US coins:
The difference between grade and condition.
Commentary on a difference between collecting US and ancient coins.
Information about rarity and its (lack of) importance for cost (for intermediate collectors).
Coin collecting is a hobby of the mind.
Information about avoiding fakes.
About moving up from 'beginner' to 'intermediate' collector.
Ancient coins as an investment.
Annotated Roman coin educational links (with some Greek and Byzantine coin links too).
Links to web sites that emphasize particular emperors.
(These are educational pages and nothing here is for sale. If you are looking for ancient coins for sale, here is my site, Augustus Coins, and here are links to other sites.)

What's new? 2021, Jan. 30: Turkoman figural types. Coins of the 'Foes of the Crusaders.'
2021, Jan. 24: Maximian's name (a long version from his second reign, 307-308)
2020, Nov. 19: Coins of Persis (an ancient kingdom contemporary with the Parthians)
2020, Sept. 29: A collection of coins of the Kingdom of the Bosporus.
2020, Sept. 10:
Carus, Numerian, and Carinus, titles and dating
2020, July 29: A short page on Irene, Byzantine empress and ruler in her own name, 797-802.
2020, June 27: Barbarous radiates of the Gallo-Roman empire, mostly 271-274.
2020, May 9: Pronunciation.
2020, May 4: Coins of the Roman rulers, 306-324. Commemorative coins from 306 to 324.
Revised links to many pages on coins of the tetrarchies and later, 284-324.
2020, March 4: Type Sets for the emperors from 364-450: http://augustuscoins.com/ed/ricix/typesets.html

Feb. 28: Links to several pages on coins of the tetrarchies.
Feb 24: Coins of the Second Tetrarchy, 305-306. Post-reform radiates a.k.a radiate fractions. SACRA MONETA.
Feb. 9, 2020: Introduction to Roman coins of the First Tetrarchy, 294-305.
Feb. 9: Abdication Coins of Diocletian and Maximan, 305-307.
Feb. 9: Follis types of the First Tetrarchy, 293-305.
2019: Oct. 28: A type set of AE for Arcadius. Links to other type sets are here. These are part of the large site on late Roman AE, 364-450.
Oct. 17: The early triskeles symbol at Aspendos in Pamphylia (Turkey)
Oct. 14: A second page of interesting CoinTalk threads.
August 28: Introduction to Byzantine Coins. For those who know little or nothing about Byzantine coins.

Contents: Scroll down to see site titles in chronological order of the topic.
For beginners: FAQ, possible collecting themes, educational links, ancient-coin dealers, eBay fakesellers to avoid, grade and condition, links to interesting CoinTalk threads.
Major sites: Late Roman AE (364-450),
Early Christian Symbols on Roman coins, Ancient Imitations, Introduction to Byzantine coins, Byzantine coins of the Cherson mint.
Large sites: VOTA coins of the Roman empire, reverse types unique to a particular emperor, how dates are determined for coins of the Roman Republic, Coins of the tetrarchies, 284-305
Unusual denominations: The Republican and imperial quinarius, the late Roman silver argenteus, late Roman AE fractions (mostly from Trier), the quarter-follis (c. 305), the 'radiate fraction' from Diocletian's coin reform.
Emperors: Trajan, Geta, Severus Alexander (year 5 at Alexandria), Maximinus I the giant, Volusian, the First Tetrarchy, Constantine as FIL AVG, Vetranio, Constantius Gallus, Jovian, Eudoxia (wife of Arcadius), type sets of emperors 364-450, Justinian at Antioch.
Byzantine: Introduction to Byzantine coins, Justinian at Antioch, anonymous folles (10th-11th centuries), the Dan Clark collection of early Byzantine coins with a cross above the head, a complete list of the Byzantine coins minted at the Cherson mint (7th-11th centuries).
Many other pages, more or less in chronological order, below.
Skip down to the period of the Roman Republic, the third century, the tetrarchy, and Constantine. Contents of Sale Catalogs (by firm)(by collecting theme).

Click on the images to go to the pages.
Dates: All of ancient coinage
Possible Collecting Themes and reference works about them
to help answer the question 'What should I collect?'

This coin: A silver Roman provincial coin of Trajan with a camel on the reverse, celebrating his annexation of Arabia in AD 106 . It could be part of a collection of imperial portraits, a collection of coins of Trajan, a collection of Roman provincial coins, or part of a collection of animals on ancient coins.


Educational sites (chronological order):
Date: c. 465 BC and later.
Triskeles, a symbol of Aspendos, Pamphylia (Turkey)
A discussion of the three-legged type. [One page]
This coin: The first type from Aspendos, c. 465-435 BC, a silver stater with a triskeles.



Date: c. 324 BC.
Coins and archaeology work together to identify Seuthes III
This coin: Greek king Seuthes III

[A short page about one type]


Dates: Third to First Centuries BC
Roman Republican Coin Types and their Dating
Republican coins are not explicitly dated, so how can we know their dates?
A timeline page of examples plus a page of theory.
This coin: one of the first types of the silver 'denarius' denomination


Date: First century BC.
Roman Republican plated imitation in Dacian style

[A short page about one coin]

Dates: Roman Republic and Empire to AD 321
TheQuinariusDenomination
An illustrated discussion of the five time periods with the 'quinarius'
This coin: 16-15 mm. Issue of the moneyer C. Fundanius, 101 BC.

[A very long page]


Date: First Century to Fourth Century
A collection of coins of the Kingdom of the Bosporus
[one long page]
This coin: King Mithradates III and his step-mother Gepaepyris, struck 39-41.

Date: First Century
DIVVS AVGVSTVS
A few coins that commemorate the deification of Augustus

[One short page]


Ancient roman coins for sale
Roman Gold Coins

Date: First and second centuries

The Quadrans and Semis Denominations
of Roman Imperial Coins

An Introduction. [A long page]

This coin: an 'anonymous' type with helmeted bust of Mars/cuirass


Date: 98-117
Trajan's historical types--especially those that refer to his Dacian Wars.
[One page]
This coin: A denarius which depicts Trajan's column, still standing in Rome.

MATRI CASTORVM 'Mother of the Camps'
This Coin: A denarius of Faustina Jr., wife of Marcus Aurelius.



Date: 198-212

Geta, his portraits, 198-212 AD.
Geta's portraits change as he ages from nine to twenty-two.
This coin: His first portrait style.

[One short page]

Severus Alexander(222-235) 'year 5'
coins of Roman Alexandria

Year 5 (AD 225/6) is particularly interesting because there are Alexandrian year 5 coins from two different years and two different mints. See the page with the explanation. [One long page]

This coin: A 'year 5' coin struck in Rome for the mint of Alexandria, Egypt. 1886 silver dollar price.


Date: 235-238
Maximinus Thrax, the giant. Roman emperor 235-238. His portrait types.
Maximinus Thrax issued denarii with three distinct portrait types.
This coin: The early style portrait.

[One long page]



Date: 251-253

What was Volusian's name?
Volusian, Augustus, 251-253 AD.
This coin: Volusian, stuck at Antioch.

[One short page]


Date: 259-274
Barbarous radiates of the Gallo-Roman Empire, 259-274
This coin: A imitation of Tetricus I
[One page]



Date: 270-293

The Tripolis mint of late third century AD Rome
An illustrated list of all the coin types of the Tripolis mint.
An educational resource for collectors.
[One long page with links to additional examples]


This coin: Tacitus, 276 AD.


Date: 282-285

Carus, Numerian, and Carinus
Titles and dating
[One page]
This coin: Carus with the title 'PARTHICO' deified after his death.


Date: 284-324
Links to pages about
the coins of the First and Second Tetrarchies and later.
(all pages can be reached from the first, introductory, page):
'Introduction to the Roman coins of the First Tetrarchy: Diocletian, Maximian, Constantius, and Galerius'
'Roman coins of the Second Tetrarchy'
'Coins of the Roman rulers, July 306 to 324'
'Coins of the First Tetrarchy: Pre-Reform Coins of Diocletian, Maximian, Constantius I, and Galerius'
'Follis types of the First Tetrarchy, 293-305 CE'
'GENIO POPVLI ROMANI: a common late Roman coin type' by emperor
The same coins organized by mint.
'SACRA MONETA: Roman coins of the First Tetrarchy, 294-305'
Abdication types of Diocletian and Maximian
GENIO types
Commemoratives issued from 306 to 324
How to distinguish coins of Maximian from coins of Galerius
The 'radiate fraction' a.k.a. 'post-reform radiate' denomination.
The silver argenteus denomination.

How coins are dated to the Second Tetrarchy
After the Second Tetrarchy, 306-324.
Adfini, Cognat, Patri, Socero, under Maxentius at Rome
Types with FORTVNA
Antoniniani from Siscia with coded officina numbers


Date: 284-305
Introduction to Roman coins of the First Tetrarchy, 284-305
Diocletian, Maximian, Galerius, and Constantius.
This coin: An aurelianus (antoninianus) of Diocletian.



Date: 305-306
Roman Coins of the Second Tetrarchy, 305-306
Constantius, Galerius, Severus II, and Maximinus II
This coin: A follis of Constantius as Augustus

Date: 306-307
Coins of the Roman rulers, July 306 to 324
Constantine, Galerius, Severus II, Maximinus II, Maxentius, Maximian (second reign), Licinius
This coin: Constantine as Caesar, 306-307

Follis types of the First Tetrarchy, 293-305 CE.
An illustrated list of the follis types issued during the First Tetrarchy

This Coin: A follis issued to celebrate Maximian's arrival to Carthage.


Date: 305-307
Abdication Coins of Roman Emperors
Diocletian and Maximian, 284-305 CE.

An illustrated list of all the types.
This coin: Diocletian as retired emperor. 25 mm.



Date: 289-290
Coded Officina Marks of the Roman emperors
Diocletian and Maximian at Siscia (289-290 AD)

The unique use of the Jovian and Herculian titles to indicate officina numbers. [One page]
This coin: Maximian with mintmark incorporating ΛI, part of a code.


Dates: 293-310
GENIO POPVLI ROMANI, a common type under the tetrarchy (arranged by ruler). Portraits arranged by mint.
This coin: Diocletian from Aquileia
[Several pages for several emperors]


Dates: 286-313

Distinguishing Maximian, Galerius, and Maximinus II
This coin says 'MAXIMIANVS' but is of Galerius.
Find out how to tell them apart.

[One page with lots of examples]



Date: 293 - 300

Fortuna under the first tetrachy:
Diocletian, Maximian, Constantius, and Galerius (293-300 AD)

A rare follis type issued only at Trier.
This coin: Diocletian/FORTVNAE REDVCI AVGG NN
[One page]

Date: c. AD 300
Late Roman fractions from Trier under the tetrarchy
An introduction.
This coin: a small, 13 mm, fraction, struck for Diocletian, minted at Trier.
VOT/XX/AVGG, in celebration of his 20th anniversary

[One long page]

Dates: AD 294-310
The Argenteus Denomination
An illustrated discussion of the history and types of the denomination.
This coin: 20-19 mm. An argenteus of Diocletian, struck 96 (XCVI) to the pound of silver.

[A very long page with many illustations]

Dates: AD 287-297
Usurpers who wanted to join the club
Usurpers under the first tetrarchy (the time of Diocletian and Maximian)
This coin: The usurper Domitius Domitianus at Alexandria, Egypt.
[A single page about two usurpers]


Date: 305-306

The unusual '
quarter-follis' denomination
struck 305-306 AD under the tetrarchy

An illustrated list of all the varieties. An educational resource for collectors.
This coin: A quarter-follis of Maximinus II.

Dates: AD 310-311
Adfini, Cognat, Patri, Socero
under Maxentius at Rome
Some unusual words found on a commemorative series issued by Maxentius

This coin: 23 mm. IMP MAXENTIVS DIVO MAXIMIANO PATRI

[A single short page with four types illustrated]

Date: 312 AD
Anonymous civic issues under Maximinus II (AD 310-313)
also known as 'pagan coinage of the Great Presecution of Christians' and as 'Civic coinage.'
[A single page with the types.]

This coin: 15 mm. Jupiter/Victory



Date: 306-310

Constantine as Caesar and as FIL AVG (A.D. 306-310)
An illustrated article on the the Roman rulers and their mints from 306-310
when Constantine was awarded the unusual title 'Filius Augusti'.
This coin: Constantine as 'FIL AVG', minted at Antioch.

[A long article with 33 relevant coins illustrated]

Roman

Date: First and second centuries

The Quadrans and Semis Denominations
of Roman Imperial Coins

An Introduction. [A long page]

This coin: an 'anonymous' type with helmeted bust of Mars/cuirass


Date: 98-117
Trajan's historical types--especially those that refer to his Dacian Wars.
[One page]
This coin: A denarius which depicts Trajan's column, still standing in Rome.

MATRI CASTORVM 'Mother of the Camps'
This Coin: A denarius of Faustina Jr., wife of Marcus Aurelius.



Date: 198-212

Geta, his portraits, 198-212 AD.
Geta's portraits change as he ages from nine to twenty-two.
This coin: His first portrait style.

[One short page]

Severus Alexander(222-235) 'year 5'
coins of Roman Alexandria

Year 5 (AD 225/6) is particularly interesting because there are Alexandrian year 5 coins from two different years and two different mints. See the page with the explanation. [One long page]

This coin: A 'year 5' coin struck in Rome for the mint of Alexandria, Egypt. 1886 silver dollar price.


Date: 235-238
Maximinus Thrax, the giant. Roman emperor 235-238. His portrait types.
Maximinus Thrax issued denarii with three distinct portrait types.
This coin: The early style portrait.

[One long page]



Date: 251-253

What was Volusian's name?
Volusian, Augustus, 251-253 AD.
This coin: Volusian, stuck at Antioch.

[One short page]


Date: 259-274
Barbarous radiates of the Gallo-Roman Empire, 259-274
This coin: A imitation of Tetricus I
[One page]



Date: 270-293

The Tripolis mint of late third century AD Rome
An illustrated list of all the coin types of the Tripolis mint.
An educational resource for collectors.
[One long page with links to additional examples]


This coin: Tacitus, 276 AD.


Date: 282-285

Carus, Numerian, and Carinus
Titles and dating
[One page]
This coin: Carus with the title 'PARTHICO' deified after his death.


Date: 284-324
Links to pages about
the coins of the First and Second Tetrarchies and later.
(all pages can be reached from the first, introductory, page):
'Introduction to the Roman coins of the First Tetrarchy: Diocletian, Maximian, Constantius, and Galerius'
'Roman coins of the Second Tetrarchy'
'Coins of the Roman rulers, July 306 to 324'
'Coins of the First Tetrarchy: Pre-Reform Coins of Diocletian, Maximian, Constantius I, and Galerius'
'Follis types of the First Tetrarchy, 293-305 CE'
'GENIO POPVLI ROMANI: a common late Roman coin type' by emperor
The same coins organized by mint.
'SACRA MONETA: Roman coins of the First Tetrarchy, 294-305'
Abdication types of Diocletian and Maximian
GENIO types
Commemoratives issued from 306 to 324
How to distinguish coins of Maximian from coins of Galerius
The 'radiate fraction' a.k.a. 'post-reform radiate' denomination.
The silver argenteus denomination.

How coins are dated to the Second Tetrarchy
After the Second Tetrarchy, 306-324.
Adfini, Cognat, Patri, Socero, under Maxentius at Rome
Types with FORTVNA
Antoniniani from Siscia with coded officina numbers


Date: 284-305
Introduction to Roman coins of the First Tetrarchy, 284-305
Diocletian, Maximian, Galerius, and Constantius.
This coin: An aurelianus (antoninianus) of Diocletian.



Date: 305-306
Roman Coins of the Second Tetrarchy, 305-306
Constantius, Galerius, Severus II, and Maximinus II
This coin: A follis of Constantius as Augustus

Date: 306-307
Coins of the Roman rulers, July 306 to 324
Constantine, Galerius, Severus II, Maximinus II, Maxentius, Maximian (second reign), Licinius
This coin: Constantine as Caesar, 306-307

Follis types of the First Tetrarchy, 293-305 CE.
An illustrated list of the follis types issued during the First Tetrarchy

This Coin: A follis issued to celebrate Maximian's arrival to Carthage.


Date: 305-307
Abdication Coins of Roman Emperors
Diocletian and Maximian, 284-305 CE.

An illustrated list of all the types.
This coin: Diocletian as retired emperor. 25 mm.



Date: 289-290
Coded Officina Marks of the Roman emperors
Diocletian and Maximian at Siscia (289-290 AD)

The unique use of the Jovian and Herculian titles to indicate officina numbers. [One page]
This coin: Maximian with mintmark incorporating ΛI, part of a code.


Dates: 293-310
GENIO POPVLI ROMANI, a common type under the tetrarchy (arranged by ruler). Portraits arranged by mint.
This coin: Diocletian from Aquileia
[Several pages for several emperors]


Dates: 286-313

Distinguishing Maximian, Galerius, and Maximinus II
This coin says 'MAXIMIANVS' but is of Galerius.
Find out how to tell them apart.

[One page with lots of examples]



Date: 293 - 300

Fortuna under the first tetrachy:
Diocletian, Maximian, Constantius, and Galerius (293-300 AD)

A rare follis type issued only at Trier.
This coin: Diocletian/FORTVNAE REDVCI AVGG NN
[One page]

Date: c. AD 300
Late Roman fractions from Trier under the tetrarchy
An introduction.
This coin: a small, 13 mm, fraction, struck for Diocletian, minted at Trier.
VOT/XX/AVGG, in celebration of his 20th anniversary

[One long page]

Dates: AD 294-310
The Argenteus Denomination
An illustrated discussion of the history and types of the denomination.
This coin: 20-19 mm. An argenteus of Diocletian, struck 96 (XCVI) to the pound of silver.

[A very long page with many illustations]

Dates: AD 287-297
Usurpers who wanted to join the club
Usurpers under the first tetrarchy (the time of Diocletian and Maximian)
This coin: The usurper Domitius Domitianus at Alexandria, Egypt.
[A single page about two usurpers]


Date: 305-306

The unusual '
quarter-follis' denomination
struck 305-306 AD under the tetrarchy

An illustrated list of all the varieties. An educational resource for collectors.
This coin: A quarter-follis of Maximinus II.

Dates: AD 310-311
Adfini, Cognat, Patri, Socero
under Maxentius at Rome
Some unusual words found on a commemorative series issued by Maxentius

This coin: 23 mm. IMP MAXENTIVS DIVO MAXIMIANO PATRI

[A single short page with four types illustrated]

Date: 312 AD
Anonymous civic issues under Maximinus II (AD 310-313)
also known as 'pagan coinage of the Great Presecution of Christians' and as 'Civic coinage.'
[A single page with the types.]

This coin: 15 mm. Jupiter/Victory



Date: 306-310

Constantine as Caesar and as FIL AVG (A.D. 306-310)
An illustrated article on the the Roman rulers and their mints from 306-310
when Constantine was awarded the unusual title 'Filius Augusti'.
This coin: Constantine as 'FIL AVG', minted at Antioch.

[A long article with 33 relevant coins illustrated]

Date: 330-340
CONSTANTINOPOLIS:Roman coins commemorating
the founding of Constantinople under Constantine.

A short article here (only about this one common type).
A complete list and longer article here. (The picture links to this one.)
This coin: CONSTANTINOPOLIS/Victory, 330-340 AD.


Date: 316-364

Christian Symbols on Roman Coins
A complete list of types from its beginning under Constantine to 364 AD.
A resource for collectors of late Roman AE coins.

This coin: Magnetius, AD 350-353, with a Christian chi-rho reverse type.

[A large, comprehensive, site]



Date: 217-363
Long Mintmarks on Roman Imperial coins.
A few of the longest mintmarks illustrated.
This coin: Julian II, 'the Apostate', 361-363 AD.

[One page]


Date: 350
Vetranio, Roman emperor in AD 350: His six AE coin types.
The Roman emperor Vetranio ruled in the Balkans for ten months in AD 350.
His AE coin types are listed and illustrated here.
This coin: Vetranio with the famous early Christian 'HOC SIGNO VICTOR ERIS' reverse.

[A page with a second page of additional images]


Date: 351-354
Constantius Gallus, 351-354. His AE types.
This coin: FEL TEM REPARATIO, soldier-spearing-fallen-horseman. By far his most common type.
[One long page about his 10 AE types]


Date: 363-364
Jovian, Roman emperor from June 363 to Febuary 364:
[One page about his four AE types]
The Roman emperor Jovian reigned only eight months.
His AE coin types are listed and illustrated here. [One page]
This coin: Jovian with reverse VOT/V/MVLT/X from Sirmium.

Date: 364-450
Guide to Late Roman AE Coin Types, AD 364-450
A complete list of types of emperors Valentinian I through Theodosius II and Valentinian III
A resource for collectors of Late Roman AE coins.
This coin: Valens/GLORIA ROMANORVM
[A very large reference site with many pages]

Type Sets for the emperors from 364-450
http://augustuscoins.com/ed/ricix/typesets.html



Dates: 364-375

Officina Numbers on Late Roman Coins
The unusual use of officina numbers spelled out on issues of Valentinian, Valens, and Gratian.
This coin: Valens, 364-378 AD, with officina PRIMA.

[One page]



Eudoxia, wife of Arcadius, Augusta 400-404
Her two AE types. [One short page]

This coin: Her bust right, crowned by the Hand of God
/empress seated facing, crowned by the Hand of God.

Byzantine:

Date: 491-1453

Introduction to Byzantine Coins (491-1453)
This coin: A massive 42 mm reformed 'follis' (of 40 nummi) struck by Justinian (527-565) year 13 at Nicomedia.
A site for beginners about the coins struck under the Byzantine Empire with a few stories that will interest more-advanced collectorss too. [Six substantial pages.]


Date: 498-538
The Dan Clark Collection of early
Byzantine copper coins with a cross above the head.
An extensive collection of unusual cross-above head coins.
[Several pages]
This Coin: Justin I (518-527), Sear 84, with a bold cross above his head.


Date: 527-565

The Byzantine emperor Justinian(527-565 AD)
and the earthquakes at Antioch.
Byzantine coins of Justinian from Antioch
[One very long page]
This coin: Justinian seated facing on a throne




Date: 425-1071

Byzantine Coins of Cherson (Kherson)

The unusual Byzantine types from the city of Cherson in the Crimea.
A resource for collectors.
This coin: The 'H' (= 8) pentanummia denomination.

[A large, comprehensive, site with many pages]

Date: 10th - 11th centuries
Byzantine 'anonymous folles' of the 10th - 11th centuries
The site illustrates all the types, explains attributions and dates, gives their frequencies, and tells their stories here.

This coin: A large 32-30 mm 'Class A2' follis attributed to Basil II (the Bulgar Slayer) and Constantine VIII
[Two substantial pages]

Can you think of one emperor who issued coins from one mint with more than five distinctly different mintmarks?
Begin on pages here.
Islamic.


Date: 12th - 13th centuries

Turkoman Figural Bronze: Coins of 'Foes of the Crusaders.'
This coin: An early Turkoman type with obverse imitating a Byzantine coin with Christ enthroned.

Reverse Types

Date: Entire Roman imperial period.
Some reverse types that are unique to a particular Roman emperor
in a quiz format (with immediate answers). Can you recognize them?
This type: Captive seated on a pile of arms. DAC CAP in exergue.

[A site with several pages and a hundred interesting types explained on linked pages]


Date: 116 CE.
Trajan's Parthian War.
A sestertius type that explicitly mentions Armenia and Mesopotamia.
[A short page]


Date: Second to fifth centuries
VOTA coins of the Roman Empire
Vows to reward the gods for granting a wish were are part of the Roman religion
A large site about vows recorded on Roman coins.

This coin: VOTA SVSCEPTA XX (vows taken for 20 years of reign)
Septimius Severus (193-211) sacrificing at the ceremony celebrating making it to 10 years, while renewing his vows to 20 years.

[A very long main page with a dozen pages linked to it]


Date: Late second century AD
MARTI CASTRORVM, Mother of the camps
This type was used on the coins of only two empresses.
This coin: A silver denarius struck for Faustina, Jr., wife of Marcus Aurelius.
[A short page]

Date: Third century AD.
ADVENTVS, arrival of the emperor
The Roman emperor arrives in Rome

This coin: Septimius Severus (193-211) returns to Rome in 202.
ADVENTVS AVGG

[One page]

Date: During the Roman empire
PROFECTIO, and other travel types

The Roman emperor departs for war
This coin: Severus Alexander (222-235), lead by Victory, departs for war in the east.

[One long page]



Date: Roman imperial period.
The real meaning of SECVRITAS on Roman coins.
This coin: Caracalla, 196-217 AD
[A short page with a few examples]

Roman Gold Coins Augustus Caesar

General

Roman Gold Coins Found In Italy



Date: The entire Roman period

Ancient Imitations of Roman Coins
An educational site about genuinely ancient coins that were imitations or counterfeits in their day.
This coin: An ancient counterfeit Roman Republican denarius.

Roman Gold Coins For Sale

[A very large site with one long main page and many pages linked to it]

Roman Gold Coins Age


Ancient Coin Auction Catalogs: Contents
An educational site for ancient coin collectors about sale catalogs.
A related site where catalogs are grouped by collecting theme.
This catalog: M&M 37, Basel, Switzerland.

[One very long page]

Links to interesting CoinTalk threads.

Roman Gold Coins Weight


Links to useful notes and printouts for a few good books, including the Seaby introductory series (Greek, Roman, Roman Provincial), SNG Copenhagen, BCD Peloponessos, Celator index, SAN index, Ras Suarez' rarity rankings, Latin pronunciation, list of Greek authorities, and a few legends of Roman Alexandria translated.

The end of the table of contents for the educational site.

Ancient Roman Coins For Sale

Here are ancient coins and related literature for sale.

Gold Roman Coins For Sale





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