Late Roman Bronze Coins
Coin talk => Late Roman Bronze coins => Topic started by: Victor on November 13, 2021, 10:47:29 AM
It's neat having an old collection tag, except when they glued it to the coin. ::) I also don't have the provenance, so the tag is doubly worthless. I have another coin with the same type tag and I am soaking it in acetone to see if it will come off; but no luck so far.
Constantine I
A.D. 307
26mm 6.4g
FL VAL CONSTANTINVS N C; laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right.
GENIO POPVLI ROMANI; Genius standing l., modius on head, loins draped, r. holding patera, l. cornucopiae; altar to l., N in r. field.
In ex. PLG
RIC VI Lyons 214b
Strange way to treat a collection.. seems like the kind of thing a museum might do more than an individual, perhaps, but who knows. Maybe heating it up a bit would soften the adhesive if acetone doesn't do the trick.
Could be worse, such as Gonzaga "countermark", which I just read is more than just a stamp - it's a silver inlay.
Please excuse the NSFW example!
Yes, it could have been a museum collection. I wouldn't mind the Gonzaga countermark as much, since it at least has a provenance...my coin just has a tag glued on by some anonymous jerk! ;D I actually have several of these with old numbers glued on.