You have not bid on this auction.
One only King Of Judea Bronze Coin 104-103 BC
- SKU
- CP1155
- Dimensions (mm)
- 16.000 x 16.000 x 2.000mm
- Weight (g)
- 0.200
- Year
- 104
- Colours
-
One only King Of Judea Bronze Coin 104-103 BC
Bronze Prutah- Judah Aristobulus I (Yehudah) King of Judaea: 104-103 B.C.E
One only Ancient AE4 Coin picked from parcel
all coins show good detail as per images
Judah Aristobulus I (Yehudah) King of Judaea: 104-103 B.C.E
Bronze 'Prutah' 13mm (1.96 grams) Jerusalem mint, struck circa 104 B.C.
Reference: Hendin 1143
Paleo-Hebrew inscription (Yehudah the High Priest and the Council of the Jews) in wedge-style characters within wreath.
Double cornucopia adorned with ribbons, pomegranate between horns, border of dots.
The dies for this coin were either made by the same die cutter, or at least the same workshop of Jannaeus No. 1144, which suggests that this was the later of the Aristobulus types, and puts the coin immediately before the coins of Jannaeus.
A loaf of bread in ancient times was worth about 10 prutot (plural of prutah). One prutah was also worth two lepta (singular lepton), which was the smallest denomination minted by the Hasmonean and Herodian Dynasty kings .
This prutah, minted at Jerusalem in the Jewish rebels during the First Jewish Revolt, depicts on the obverse an amphora, and on the reverse a vine leaf
- SKU
- CP1155
- Dimensions (mm)
- 16.000 x 16.000 x 2.000 mm
- Weight (g)
- 0.200
- Year
- 104
- Colours
-
One only King Of Judea Bronze Coin 104-103 BC
Bronze Prutah- Judah Aristobulus I (Yehudah) King of Judaea: 104-103 B.C.E
One only Ancient AE4 Coin picked from parcel
all coins show good detail as per images
Judah Aristobulus I (Yehudah) King of Judaea: 104-103 B.C.E
Bronze 'Prutah' 13mm (1.96 grams) Jerusalem mint, struck circa 104 B.C.
Reference: Hendin 1143
Paleo-Hebrew inscription (Yehudah the High Priest and the Council of the Jews) in wedge-style characters within wreath.
Double cornucopia adorned with ribbons, pomegranate between horns, border of dots.
The dies for this coin were either made by the same die cutter, or at least the same workshop of Jannaeus No. 1144, which suggests that this was the later of the Aristobulus types, and puts the coin immediately before the coins of Jannaeus.
A loaf of bread in ancient times was worth about 10 prutot (plural of prutah). One prutah was also worth two lepta (singular lepton), which was the smallest denomination minted by the Hasmonean and Herodian Dynasty kings .
This prutah, minted at Jerusalem in the Jewish rebels during the First Jewish Revolt, depicts on the obverse an amphora, and on the reverse a vine leaf
Shipping provider | Shipping to Australia | Shipping to rest of world |
---|---|---|
FedEx | $12.00 / 3 days | $39.00 / 7 days |
Australia
FedEx is discounted to $12.00 on orders with 2 or more items
Rest of the world
FedEx is discounted to $39.00 on orders with 2 or more items
|
||
Registered Shipping | $9.00 / 7 days | $16.00 / 21 days |
Australia
Registered Shipping is discounted to $9.00 on orders with 2 or more items
Rest of the world
Registered Shipping is discounted to $16.00 on orders with 2 or more items
|
-
Positive
A great bit of history. Great price and coin
-
Positive
Great coin at a great price and all as pictured. Also fast shipping. Thankyou.
-
Positive
Paid and shipped - no feedback left after 100 days
Why are users outbidding themselves?
When a bid is placed, this is the maximum amount a user is willing to bid for the product. Our system will then automatically bid on that users behalf, incrementally increasing the bid to maintain their position as the highest bidder, up to the specified maximum.
When there is an icon indicating 'Auto Bid,' it means our system is actively placing bids for the user based on their maximum bid. This may appear as if users are outbidding themselves, but it's simply a result of the system updating the bid to reflect the users maximum limit.