• Home
  • Index
  • Search
  • Download
  • Server Rules
  • House Roleplay Laws
  • Player Utilities
  • Player Help
  • Forum Utilities
  • Returning Player?
  • Toggle Sidebar
Interactive Nav-Map
Tutorials
New Wiki
ID reference
Restart reference
Players Online
Player Activity
Faction Activity
Player Base Status
Discord Help Channel
DarkStat
Server public configs
POB Administration
Missing Powerplant
Stuck in Connecticut
Account Banned
Lost Ship/Account
POB Restoration
Disconnected
Member List
Forum Stats
Show Team
View New Posts
View Today's Posts
Calendar
Help
Archive Mode




Hi there Guest,  
Existing user?   Sign in    Create account
Login
Username:
Password: Lost Password?
 
  Discovery Gaming Community The Community Real Life Discussion
« Previous 1 … 20 21 22 23 24 … 245 Next »
Soemone with knowledge about antiques?

Server Time (24h)

Players Online

Active Events - Scoreboard

Latest activity

Pages (4): « Previous 1 2 3 4
Soemone with knowledge about antiques?
Offline Kanzler Niemann
07-09-2017, 02:13 AM,
#31
Bane of Roussillon
Posts: 1,635
Threads: 154
Joined: Jan 2013

I would ask @Morosz since he knows a lot about old stuff and history aswell.

[Image: giphy.webp]
Reply  
Offline Smokey
07-09-2017, 08:07 AM,
#32
Member
Posts: 256
Threads: 24
Joined: Sep 2016

So you've gone from:

it's definitely older than the reign of Emperor Heraaclios (610-641) (Heraclius* btw)

to;
then it's probably from the period between that year (313 AD) and 610

to;
I think the coin is a follis, a small copper or bronze coin minted since the reign of Diocletian (284-305).


If David Dickinson did that he'd be laughed out the market

[Image: Smk-resized.png]
Reply  
Offline Thunderer
07-09-2017, 12:43 PM, (This post was last modified: 07-09-2017, 12:53 PM by Thunderer.)
#33
Tea Disposal Unit
Posts: 5,611
Threads: 463
Joined: Jul 2011

Heraclios, not Heraclius. It's a Greek name. Heraclius is the Latinized version, and Latin was out of use in the Empire by his time. It was already sparsely used during the reign of Justinian I (527-565), who made quite an effort to hire someone who still spoke Latin, so all the old laws could be translated and compiled into Corpus Iuris Civilis (Body of Civil Law). Heraclios finally made Greek the official language of the Empire. His name was Ἡράκλειος', which is read as Iráklios.

The follis was minted since the reign of Diocletian, not only for its duration. Wikipedia says that it "was reintroduced as a large bronze coin in 498", so it was definitely still in use after 313, if Wikipedia is correct.

Also, there is no indication that this coin was minted after 313, because we don't know what the symbols are. @PRJKTLRD only assumed they could be Christian, but nothing is certain. If this is a follis, however, it is definitely younger than 294, because that's the year Wikipedia says the follis was introduced, if Wikipedia is correct.

We'll get a certain date when we can read the text on the coin's face, because it should say who the person printed on it is. My guess is either Valentinian I (364-375) or Theodosius I (379-395), by the look of the person.

It might not be as much of a sensation as it seems, though. Wikipedia says that the 4th century follis is the most frequently found ancient coin in Britain. I've done a search on eBay and the average sale price of a follis from the reign of Theodosius I is... 10 euros Big GrinBig GrinBig Grin

[Image: 396AUfe.png]
Bretonian Treaty Database Bretonian Armed Forces Recruitment Center
Bretonian Charter of Interstellar Law Bretonian Secrets Act
Reply  
Pages (4): « Previous 1 2 3 4


  • View a Printable Version
  • Subscribe to this thread


Users browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)



Powered By MyBB, © 2002-2025 MyBB Group. Theme © 2014 iAndrew & DiscoveryGC
  • Contact Us
  •  Lite mode
Linear Mode
Threaded Mode