ROMAN NUMISMATICS REFERENCE LOT.
1. David Sear. ROMAN COINS AND THEIR VALUES. 2nd Edition. 1984. A basic one volume reference that is still useful and relevant. This edition uses line drawings instead of photos and the detail, particularly of the legends, is clear. 376 page. 12 plates of photos. Hardcover. Fine and fresh cover. Minor dust jacket tears.
2. David Sear. GREEK IMPERIAL COINS. THE LOCAL COINAGES OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE. Still the best single volume on the series. 636 pages. Hardcover. Photographs throughout. Contents fine. Minor tears on dust jacket. Overall Very Good copy.
3. H. A. Seaby. ROMAN SILVER COINS. Four separate hard cover volumes based on the work of Cohen. This detailed listing is still standardly used to catalog Roman silver. Later editions of the set primarily changed prices and added photographs. This earlier edition is still accurate for its numbering and the line drawings are useful for the same reason cited for the first book in this lot. Fine copies. Dust jackets show very little wear.
Davissons Ltd uses a soft close for its auctions, which means no lot closes until everyone is done bidding. Every time a bid is placed within the final 40 seconds of a lot closing, the timer is reset to 40 seconds. This continues until no bids are placed for 40 seconds, at which point the lot closes. There will never be more than one lot closing at once, as the next lot is not allowed to begin closing until the current lot closes.
To bid: enter your maximum bid into the text box, and click submit. Only round dollar amounts are accepted. You are then required to confirm your bid. Once confirmed, all bids are final. If you have placed a bid in error you must call during office hours and speak to one of us. If you are the current high bidder then it will display “Current High Bidder: YOU” If you are not the high bidder, or if you are not logged in, then the current high bidder will be identified by their 5 digit client ID. You may find your client ID under the Account tab.
Bids are reduced automatically, so feel free to bid your maximum and it will be reduced to one increment over the current high bid. If a user places a bid that is higher than necessary to be the current high bidder on the lot, the displayed bid will reflect one advance over the next lower bid. For example, if a user "A" places a bid of $120 on a lot which opens at $100, "A" will be winning that lot at $100. If another user "B" bids $110, the winning bidder will be "A" at $120, one advance over the supporting bid of $110. If user "B" in this example instead placed a bid at $120, then user "A" will still be winning at $120 because they placed that maximum bid value first.
Increments can be viewed here. The next bid will always be on the next increment, so if a user is winning a lot at $100, or $105, or $109, the next bid will still always be $110.
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