Printed Auction 38

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Closed February 27, 2019
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  1. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A38, Lot 61:

    MACEDON. Koinon of Macedon. Pseudo-autonomous issue, temp. Severus Alexander. A.D. 222-235. Æ. 12.27 gm. 27 mm. Beroea mint. Diademed head of Alexander the Great right; ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΥ / Macedonia seated left on throne with back, holding Kabeiros; ΚΟΙΝΟΝ ΜΑΚΕΔΟΝΩΝ ΟΜΟΝΟΙ-Α around. AMNG III 333 var. (helmeted head on obverse). Very Fine; fine green patina; attractive, with a great portrait of Alexander. Rare variation, unpublished in Gaebler.

    The Koinon of the Macedonians was a confederation of Macedonian cities under a central government or king (or, under Roman rule, the Roman emperor). Rooted in the Hellenistic period, this central administration handled diplomatic issues both between member city-states and with foreign bodies. Coins issued in the name of the 'Macedonians' first appear during the reigns of Philip V and Perseus, and continued to appear under Roman rule. The Romans reorganized the Koinon around the imperial cult and put members of the local elite in charge. They organized and financed festivals and games, and were awarded Roman citizenship in return. The iconography of the Koinon issues (Alexander the Great, the Macedonian shield, and so on) reflect a powerful ethnic and civic identity that, as it was no longer a threat to Roman control, was allowed to flourish. (Howgego, Christopher; Heuchert, Volker; Burnett, Andrew, Coinage and Identity in the Roman Provinces. 2005.)

  2. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A38, Lot 62:

    MACEDON. Koinon of Macedon. Pseudo-autonomous issue, temp. Gordian III. A.D. 238-244. Æ. 11.95 gm. 25 mm. Beroea mint. Diademed head of Alexander the Great right; AΛEΞANΔPOC / Two prize urns, each containing palm frond, set upon agonistic table with decorated legs; urn set on ground under table; KOI MAKEΔONΩN B N EΩKO around. AMNG 461. Good Very Fine; well centered and well struck; pleasing green patina; bold attractive portrait of Alexander. Unusual and rare obverse inscription for this series.

    This coin commemorates the games held in Beroea that honored Alexander and had Olympic status, and is an important type.

    The Koinon of the Macedonians was a confederation of Macedonian cities under a central government or king (or, under Roman rule, the Roman emperor). Rooted in the Hellenistic period, this central administration handled diplomatic issues both between member city-states and with foreign bodies. Coins issued in the name of the 'Macedonians' first appear during the reigns of Philip V and Perseus, and continued to appear under Roman rule. The Romans reorganized the Koinon around the imperial cult and put members of the local elite in charge. They organized and financed festivals and games, and were awarded Roman citizenship in return. The iconography of the Koinon issues (Alexander the Great, the Macedonian shield, and so on) reflect a powerful ethnic and civic identity that, as it was no longer a threat to Roman control, was allowed to flourish. (Howgego, Christopher; Heuchert, Volker; Burnett, Andrew, Coinage and Identity in the Roman Provinces. 2005.)

  3. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
  4. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A38, Lot 64:

    MACEDON. Koinon of Macedon. Pseudo-autonomous issue, temp. Gordian III. A.D. 238-244. Æ. 13.57 gm. 25 mm. Beroea mint. Dated year 275 (A.D. 244). Head of Alexander the Great right, wearing crested Attic helmet with griffin on bowl; AΛEΞANΔPOY / Alexander the Great on horseback right, brandishing spear; EOC (date) below, KOINON MAKEΔONΩN B NEΩKOP. AMNG 850. Good Very Fine; dark green and brown patina.

    Bucephalus or Bucephalas ("ox-head") was the horse of Alexander the Great, and one of the most famous horses of antiquity. Ancient accounts state that Bucephalus died after the Battle of the Hydaspes in 326 BC, in what is now modern Punjab Province of Pakistan, and is buried in Jalalpur Sharif outside Jhelum, Punjab, Pakistan.

    The Koinon of the Macedonians was a confederation of Macedonian cities under a central government or king (or, under Roman rule, the Roman emperor). Rooted in the Hellenistic period, this central administration handled diplomatic issues both between member city-states and with foreign bodies. Coins issued in the name of the 'Macedonians' first appear during the reigns of Philip V and Perseus, and continued to appear under Roman rule. The Romans reorganized the Koinon around the imperial cult and put members of the local elite in charge. They organized and financed festivals and games, and were awarded Roman citizenship in return. The iconography of the Koinon issues (Alexander the Great, the Macedonian shield, and so on) reflect a powerful ethnic and civic identity that, as it was no longer a threat to Roman control, was allowed to flourish. (Howgego, Christopher; Heuchert, Volker; Burnett, Andrew, Coinage and Identity in the Roman Provinces. 2005.)

  5. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A38, Lot 65:

    MACEDON. Koinon of Macedon. Pseudo-autonomous issue, temp. Gordian III. A.D. 238-244. Æ. 14.1 gm. 26 mm. Beroea mint. Dated year 275 (A.D. 244). Head of Alexander the Great right, wearing crested Attic helmet with griffin on bowl; AΛEΞANΔPOY / Lion advancing right; above, club to left and EOC (date); KOINON MAKEΔONΩN B NEΩK. AMNG 852. Good Very Fine; dark green patina.

    The Koinon of the Macedonians was a confederation of Macedonian cities under a central government or king (or, under Roman rule, the Roman emperor). Rooted in the Hellenistic period, this central administration handled diplomatic issues both between member city-states and with foreign bodies. Coins issued in the name of the 'Macedonians' first appear during the reigns of Philip V and Perseus, and continued to appear under Roman rule. The Romans reorganized the Koinon around the imperial cult and put members of the local elite in charge. They organized and financed festivals and games, and were awarded Roman citizenship in return. The iconography of the Koinon issues (Alexander the Great, the Macedonian shield, and so on) reflect a powerful ethnic and civic identity that, as it was no longer a threat to Roman control, was allowed to flourish. (Howgego, Christopher; Heuchert, Volker; Burnett, Andrew, Coinage and Identity in the Roman Provinces. 2005.)

  6. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A38, Lot 90:

    Withdrawn

  7. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    A38, Lot 112:

    Charles I. 1625-1649. AR crown. 29.91 gm. 42 mm. Type 1a. Tower mint under the King. Cross Calvary punched over lis / Cross Calvary i.m. 1626-1627. King on horseback left, holding sword over shoulder; CAROLVS D G MAG BRI FR ET HIB REX / Square-topped garnished shield over long cross fourchée; CHRISTO AVSPICE REGNO. S. 2753. N. 2190. FRC II*/VII. Good Very Fine; well struck and nicely toned on a broad flan; among the finer known of this early issue. Rare.

    Ex Davissons Auction 30 (11 October 2011) lot 208

    Ex Michael S. Tallent Collection (Stack's, 24 April 2008, lot 50)

    Ex Colin Cooke.

    This is an interesting transitional piece with a struck-over initial mark on the obverse that shows up rarely and then in less than appealing condition. Grant Francis, in the 1916 edition of The British Numismatic Journal discussing categories of the silver crowns issued by the Tower mint, followed Hawkins' work 75 years earlier where he described four main types and the varieties of those types. This first obverse type features a horseman with its stylistic debt to the crowns of James I. The reverse type is "from a new die, showing the extraordinary and unhappy division of the legend by the limbs of the cross." (Francis, p 183) Good quality examples of the variety are rare: Paget (1946), Nightingale (1951), Cooper, "coarse tooling...." (1978), to list three of the more important crown collections, offered examples inferior to this. Brooker's example (236) was inferior to this. Whetmore did not have the variety. Murdoch, lot 91, lists the type as "fine and rare," but does not provide an illustration.

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