ROMAN PROVINCIAL ANTONIUS PIUS & WIFE FAUSTIN`A 148-161 A.D
- SKU
- OP 501
- Afmetingen (mm)
- 26.000 x 26.000 x 1.000mm
- Gewicht (G)
- 0.200
- Kleuren
-
NUMBER COINS 1
CONDITION WORN /FAIR HAS BEEN CLEANED
COIN 26 MM DIAMETER
COIN WEIGHT 8.5 GRAMS
The early Roman coins made from brass ,copper or bronze had clearly defined denominations with a classification system as below
AE1 coins of 28 mm diameter or larger
AE2 coins between 23 and 27 mm diameter
AE3 coins between 18 and 22 mm diameter
AE4 coins 17mm diameter and under
Republic coins 289-41 bc
Imperial coins 27 bc – 498 ad
Roman Provincial
Roman Provincial are coins that were minted in the roman empire by local authorities not by Rome.Over 600 mints flourished during the Roman Imperial era and some based their coinage on that local coins before the Romans arrived.
The majority of these coins were bronze,as the Romans controlled silver coins and didn’t want the tribal areas to control silver but they did allow the Eastern Empire to have silver coins
Republican Coins
Before coins were struck ,trade was accomplished with cattle or rough bronze.
It wasn’t till the end of the 4th centenary that bronze was shaped into flat crude bars and did not have a standard weight.
Rome produced its first coins around 300BC,these coins were inscribed ROMANOM
(of the romans) and production continued till the end of the Punic wars in 240 BC.
Imperial Coins images on coins took an important step when JULIUS CAESAR issued coins bearing his image, this was first time a living person was on coin and was to help influence Caesars control over his empire and make him appear god like.
Many of these coins were made from silver but towards the end the silver content was lowered as silver was scarce to find and sometimes these silver coins had no silver at all, this was due ti demand for silver from india and inflation as solders pay increased for 900 sestertii under augustus to 2000 sestertii under Septimus Server and the price of grain tripled so many coins were melted .
The Republic
289-41 bc
Imperatorial Issues
71-27 bc
The Roman Empire
27 bc - 498 ad
Cast Bronze Coinage
(Aes Grave)
289 -212 bc
Pompey the Great
(and his sons)
71 - 40 bc
The Twelve Caesars
27 bc - 96 ad
The Tetrarchy
285 - 324
Western Europe and North Africa
Pyrrhic and Punic Wars
280-212 bc
Julius Caesar
49 - 40 bc
The Adoptive Emperors
96 - 197
The Age of Constantine
307 - 337
The Denarius Coinage
211 - 41 bc
Brutus and Cassius
43 - 42 bc
The Severan Dynasty
193 - 235
Heirs of Constantine
337 - 363
Mark Antony
44 - 31 bc
The Soldier Emperors
235-268
Valentinian and Theodosius
364 - 423
Octavian
43 - 27 bc
The Time of Troubles
259-285
The Late Empire
423 - 498
- SKU
- OP 501
- Afmetingen (mm)
- 26.000 x 26.000 x 1.000 mm
- Gewicht (G)
- 0.200
- Kleuren
-
NUMBER COINS 1
CONDITION WORN /FAIR HAS BEEN CLEANED
COIN 26 MM DIAMETER
COIN WEIGHT 8.5 GRAMS
The early Roman coins made from brass ,copper or bronze had clearly defined denominations with a classification system as below
AE1 coins of 28 mm diameter or larger
AE2 coins between 23 and 27 mm diameter
AE3 coins between 18 and 22 mm diameter
AE4 coins 17mm diameter and under
Republic coins 289-41 bc
Imperial coins 27 bc – 498 ad
Roman Provincial
Roman Provincial are coins that were minted in the roman empire by local authorities not by Rome.Over 600 mints flourished during the Roman Imperial era and some based their coinage on that local coins before the Romans arrived.
The majority of these coins were bronze,as the Romans controlled silver coins and didn’t want the tribal areas to control silver but they did allow the Eastern Empire to have silver coins
Republican Coins
Before coins were struck ,trade was accomplished with cattle or rough bronze.
It wasn’t till the end of the 4th centenary that bronze was shaped into flat crude bars and did not have a standard weight.
Rome produced its first coins around 300BC,these coins were inscribed ROMANOM
(of the romans) and production continued till the end of the Punic wars in 240 BC.
Imperial Coins images on coins took an important step when JULIUS CAESAR issued coins bearing his image, this was first time a living person was on coin and was to help influence Caesars control over his empire and make him appear god like.
Many of these coins were made from silver but towards the end the silver content was lowered as silver was scarce to find and sometimes these silver coins had no silver at all, this was due ti demand for silver from india and inflation as solders pay increased for 900 sestertii under augustus to 2000 sestertii under Septimus Server and the price of grain tripled so many coins were melted .
The Republic
289-41 bc
Imperatorial Issues
71-27 bc
The Roman Empire
27 bc - 498 ad
Cast Bronze Coinage
(Aes Grave)
289 -212 bc
Pompey the Great
(and his sons)
71 - 40 bc
The Twelve Caesars
27 bc - 96 ad
The Tetrarchy
285 - 324
Western Europe and North Africa
Pyrrhic and Punic Wars
280-212 bc
Julius Caesar
49 - 40 bc
The Adoptive Emperors
96 - 197
The Age of Constantine
307 - 337
The Denarius Coinage
211 - 41 bc
Brutus and Cassius
43 - 42 bc
The Severan Dynasty
193 - 235
Heirs of Constantine
337 - 363
Mark Antony
44 - 31 bc
The Soldier Emperors
235-268
Valentinian and Theodosius
364 - 423
Octavian
43 - 27 bc
The Time of Troubles
259-285
The Late Empire
423 - 498
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Registered Shipping krijgt korting op $9.00 bij bestellingen met 2 of meer artikelen
Rest van de wereld
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Positief
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Positief
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Positief
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