Lot of 13 Ancient Roman Bronze Coins | Mixed Emperors | Circa 3rd–4th Century CE
Descripción
Más
Menos
Historical Context & Origin
Region: Ancient Roman Empire
Material: Bronze / Billon / Mixed Ancient Base Metals
Period: 3rd–4th Century CE
Description
This curated lot comprises thirteen authentic Ancient Roman coins, each preserving its own character, portrait detail, and historical narrative. The grouping includes a range of denominations and reverse types, with imagery featuring emperors, military symbolism, deities, and allegorical figures—capturing the political authority, spiritual life, and imperial propaganda of Rome. Once circulated throughout the empire, these coins would have passed through the hands of merchants, soldiers, officials, and everyday citizens, making them powerful surviving fragments of ancient civilization.
Features
- Lot of thirteen genuine Ancient Roman coins
- Visible portrait busts and reverse imagery on many examples
- Variety of emperors, mints, and coin types represented
- Excellent historical teaching, study, or collector’s grouping
- Striking multi-coin display with strong cultural presence
Cultural Significance
Roman coinage served far beyond simple economic purpose. Each coin functioned as a portable message of imperial strength, military triumph, divine favor, and political identity. These coins bring to life the very system that unified the empire, offering a direct, tangible connection to Roman history nearly 1,700 years ago.
Condition
Coins exhibit natural ancient patina, expected wear, earthen deposits, and age-consistent surface texture from archaeological recovery. Levels of detail vary across the group, creating an appealing mix of preservation states. Exactly as photographed.
Dimensions (Approximate)
Varied Sizes: Approximately 13 mm to 22 mm average range
Age
Circa 3rd–4th Century CE
Learn More
Learn about the history, study, and cultural importance of Ancient Roman coins:
Study the History & Meaning of Roman Coins
Explore more authentic Roman and Greek antiquities in our collection:
Roman & Greek Artifacts – Relic & Rarity Collection
Descripción
Historical Context & Origin
Region: Ancient Roman Empire
Material: Bronze / Billon / Mixed Ancient Base Metals
Period: 3rd–4th Century CE
Description
This curated lot comprises thirteen authentic Ancient Roman coins, each preserving its own character, portrait detail, and historical narrative. The grouping includes a range of denominations and reverse types, with imagery featuring emperors, military symbolism, deities, and allegorical figures—capturing the political authority, spiritual life, and imperial propaganda of Rome. Once circulated throughout the empire, these coins would have passed through the hands of merchants, soldiers, officials, and everyday citizens, making them powerful surviving fragments of ancient civilization.
Features
- Lot of thirteen genuine Ancient Roman coins
- Visible portrait busts and reverse imagery on many examples
- Variety of emperors, mints, and coin types represented
- Excellent historical teaching, study, or collector’s grouping
- Striking multi-coin display with strong cultural presence
Cultural Significance
Roman coinage served far beyond simple economic purpose. Each coin functioned as a portable message of imperial strength, military triumph, divine favor, and political identity. These coins bring to life the very system that unified the empire, offering a direct, tangible connection to Roman history nearly 1,700 years ago.
Condition
Coins exhibit natural ancient patina, expected wear, earthen deposits, and age-consistent surface texture from archaeological recovery. Levels of detail vary across the group, creating an appealing mix of preservation states. Exactly as photographed.
Dimensions (Approximate)
Varied Sizes: Approximately 13 mm to 22 mm average range
Age
Circa 3rd–4th Century CE
Learn More
Learn about the history, study, and cultural importance of Ancient Roman coins:
Study the History & Meaning of Roman Coins
Explore more authentic Roman and Greek antiquities in our collection:
Roman & Greek Artifacts – Relic & Rarity Collection
También te puede interesar







