NumisBids
  
Classical Numismatic Group, LLC
Electronic Auction 350  6 May 2015
View prices realized

Lot 479

Estimate: 100 USD
Price realized: 179 USD
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
Claudius. AD 41-54. Æ As (27mm, 11.61 g, 6h). Uncertain mint in Iberia (Mint I). Struck circa AD 41-50. Bare head left / Minerva advancing right, brandishing spear and holding shield. Besombes & Barrandon, "Nouvelles propositions de classement des monnaies de «bronze» de Claude Ier," in RN 2000, pl. VI, 3; cf. RIC I 100; cf. von Kaenel Type 60 (for official issue). VF, green patina, some red, some cleaning marks. Distinctive portrait.

With the cessation of western provincial coinage under Gaius and the closure of the Lugdunum in AD 41, the coin supply of western provinces was stretched thin. Apparently, the mint of Rome was unable to keep up with the insatiable demand for coin, particularly in light of the pending conquest of Britain, and several official mints sprung up in Spain and Gaul in response to the shortage. These mints have long neglected by numismatists studying the Julio-Claudian coinage, and Von Kaenel himself erroneously assumes they were all products of the Rome mint. Besombes & Barrandon have broken down these western mints and separated them from both the Rome mint and the numerous imitative issues by their distinctive styles, metal content, and pattern of hoard finds.
Question about this auction? Contact Classical Numismatic Group, LLC