Sorry to bang on about your brilliant find (a restraining order cannot be all that far away), but have a look at the SNG Cop. version of your coin's "twin" in Locri, Bruttium. Once again the lettering is unclear -it's a PDF of a bad photo of a plaster cast- but the cataloguers see ΛΟΚΡΩΝ and both the cornucopiae and PHI that you mentioned, with
moved to above the wing.
Happy to report I have found another of the Lokri coins at the National Archaeological Museum of Naples in one of their displays. Two of them actually because they have both sides of the
type illustrated by different specimens, side-by-side. On the one showing its
reverse the 'control' is a N, not a PHI, but in the same position as the PHI on the specimen I have. Similar to ones Spinelli has discussed in some articles (although her
choice of the specific
Ptolemy type she believes is closely related is likely erroneous).
It was a pleasant surprise to see these coins among the terrific numismatic
collection of ancient (Greek,
Roman,
Byzantine, etc.) coins at the
MANN just a few days ago and I was able to get several pictures. If you want to see their amazing
collection of
Aes Grave and hundreds of other
ancient coins you have to show up on either a Saturday or Sunday morning as the
collection isn't open at other times like the rest of the museum. Sadly there seems to be no
catalog of this
collection and it seems unlikely most collectors would even know which coins are there unless they visit themselves or know someone who has seen the
collection. Maybe it has been discussed in this group before. And it seems to be suffering from some neglect with mostly nice displays but some cabinets with lights not working, etc.
The
MANN is unlike any other
collection of ancient artifacts (e.g. the British Museum, Paolo Orsi Museum, Oriental Institute, etc.) that I have ever seen. Many of the items found at Pompeii and Herculaneum as well as renaissance
collections of royalty and others are all at the museum in Naples. So you visit Pompeii and see the walls of the buildings demolished by the eruption of Vesuvius in AD79 but their contents were long ago taken to the museum. The floors (!) of their extensive
collection of
Magna Graecia objects (
pottery, etc.) are room after room of original mosaics taken from the excavated houses at Pompeii. You must wear shoe-covering cloth 'booties' to protect the floors!
The numismatic
collection has an interesting
hoard of over 1000 1st C.
Roman bronze coins also found in one of the houses at Pompeii with coins that
Roman collectors would love. Among them, quite a surprise, was a single
Ptolemaic bronze coin - which is on display.
Sorry for the photo
quality of the two Lokri coins here - the lighting was terrible and I just returned so haven't
had time yet to fully color-correct the pics.
PtolemAE