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  1. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
  2. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
  3. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    E40, Lot 4:

    RUSSIA. Nicholas II. 1894-1917. AV 5 rubles. 4.24 gm. 18.5 mm. 1898. KM Y. 62. Extremely Fine; a few light marks on obverse.

  4. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    E40, Lot 5:

    SWEDEN. Oscar II. 1872-1907. AV 5 kroner. 2.24 gm. 15.5 mm. 1899. KM 766. Uncirculated; lustrous and lightly toned.

  5. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
  6. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    E40, Lot 7:

    UNITED STATES. AV half eagle. 8.37 gm. 22 mm. Liberty Head. 1898. About Uncirculated; lustrous and attractive.

  7. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    E24, Lot 12:

    SICILY. Selinos. Circa 455-409 B.C. AR tetradrachm. 16.97 gm. 25 mm. Artemis, holding reins, driving quadriga right; beside her, Apollo standing right, drawing bow; barley grain in exergue / The young river god Selinos standing facing, head left, cradling palm frond and holding phiale over altar to left; before altar, cock standing left; to right, selinon (wild celery) leaf above bull standing left on basis. Schwabacher 30. HGC 2, 1221. SNG ANS 698. Jameson 720. Near Extremely Fine; beautiful style dies, well struck. Lightly toned with iridescence; traces of horn silver around part of rim. Exceptionally attractive example of this beautiful and difficult issue. Rare.

    Selinos was founded about 628 BC, the westernmost Greek colony on Sicily, and was named for the wild celery that flourished there. This magnificent tetradrachm was struck at the height of Selinos' power and wealth, within a few decades before its destruction in 409 BC by an army of combined forces from Segesta and Carthage. A similar type was chosen by Charles Seltman for his famous book "Masterpieces of Greek Coins."

    Twin brother and sister Apollo and Artemis were patron gods of Selinos. The inclusion of a cock, the badge of Himera, signifies the longstanding friendship of these two cities, which dates back to at least 480 BC, and their Classical period tetradrachms both similarly show a chariot scene on the obverse and a purifying sacrifice scene on the reverse. Both cities were destroyed in 409 BC by Carthage.

  8. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
  9. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    E40, Lot 45:

    Classic Greece. Robert Ready British Museum electrotype. Pyrrhus (in the West). Died, 272 B.C. Silver didrachm copy. 22 mm. Original copper, unsilvered. Circa 295-272 B.C. Helmeted head of Achilles left; A below / Thetis, veiled, riding left on a sea horse, holding a shield; ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ (ΠΥΡΡΟΥ). Head plate 37, 19.

    The King of Epirus whose victories against Rome and Macedonia were so costly to his forces that the term "Pyrrhic victory" has become part of modern discourse.

    Based on Barclay Head's 1889 work A Guide to the Principal Gold and Silver Coins of the Ancients. Published by the British Museum. Modified and republished in 1932; subsequently modified slightly and republished in 1959.

    An in-hand experience of the finest of Greek coinage:

    In the late 1850’s the British Museum hired the seal-maker, Robert Ready, to produce copies of some of the finest coins in the British Museum collection. With an electrotyping technique they had perfected Ready and his sons produced exact replicas of the actual museum coins. They were produced in two parts, an obverse and a reverse. We acquired a select group of some of the most beautiful and important pieces they produced. All of these were direct copper casts of the actual coins and all but lot 45 have been gilt to illustrate the color of the actual coin, silver or gold.

    All electrotypes offered here are in two separate halves.

  10. Winning Losing Won Lost Watching Available in aftersale  
    E40, Lot 46:

    Classic Greece. Robert Ready British Museum electrotype. Euboea, Chalcis. 196-146 B.C. Silver tetradrachm copy. 29 mm. Head of queen as Hera right / Hera in a quadriga holding a scepter; ΧΑΛΚΙΔΕΩΝ above, ΞΕΝΟΚΡΑΤΗΣ below. Head plate 40, 13.

    Head: "The head…may be an idealized portrait of the lady of Chalcis whom Antiochus III married there in 191 B.C.; the reverse may commemorate the games held on the occasion."

    Based on Barclay Head's 1889 work A Guide to the Principal Gold and Silver Coins of the Ancients. Published by the British Museum. Modified and republished in 1932; subsequently modified slightly and republished in 1959.

    An in-hand experience of the finest of Greek coinage:

    In the late 1850’s the British Museum hired the seal-maker, Robert Ready, to produce copies of some of the finest coins in the British Museum collection. With an electrotyping technique they had perfected Ready and his sons produced exact replicas of the actual museum coins. They were produced in two parts, an obverse and a reverse. We acquired a select group of some of the most beautiful and important pieces they produced. All of these were direct copper casts of the actual coins and all but lot 45 have been gilt to illustrate the color of the actual coin, silver or gold.

    All electrotypes offered here are in two separate halves.

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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.

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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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