FORVM`s Classical Numismatics Discussion Board
-
Dear board,
Please help me identifying this coun i have no precise size i think around 15mm
-
Dear board,
Please help me identifying this coun i have no precise size i think around 15mm
Looks like Svoronos 1161. Portrait of Aphrodite with the cornucopia and usual 'OF KING PTOLEMY' inscription on reverse. By far the most common Ptolemaic Cyprus issue bronze coin. Hundreds of them, maybe thousands, have come out of Cyprus in recent decades. Scholarly references link it with Ptolemy IV but possibly produced for a long time by more than one king; the Lincoln Penny (now in production for 110 years) of its time :)
PtolemAE
-
Thanks alot PtolemAE that was very helpful
-
In a lot of auctions they say it belongs to Cleopatra VII, it seems to be a little bit confusing coin.
Kimg regards
-
The attribution of these coins by Matthew Kreuzer to Kleopatra is quite disputed, see for example here: http://numismatics.org/magazine/cypruswinter05/
Regards
Altamura
-
The attribution of these coins by Matthew Kreuzer to Kleopatra is quite disputed, see for example here: http://numismatics.org/magazine/cypruswinter05/
Regards
Altamura
The critique by the scholarly community of Mr. Kreuzer's (self-)publication was withering, to be polite, but afaik Mr. Kreuzer did not retract it. Mr. Kreuzer was working on a comprehensive book on Ptolemaic coinage some years ago and maybe it will have more to say about this subject when it appears.
Cleo's bronze coins actually have her name and distinctly recognizable portrait right on them. They aren't in dispute and are also very common - many appear in the market every year.
PtolemAE
-
They sell better if attributed to Cleopatra VII, but virtually no serious students of Ptolemaic coins accept the attribution.