RIC Volume VI - Diocletian Reform to Maximinus: Carthage Mint Maximianus, AE Follis, c.297, Group I, Class III, Carthage, Officina 2 IMP MAXIMIANVS P F AVG Laureate head right FELIX AD_VENT AVGG N N ...
Carthage or Sicilo-Punic, AE 14, 4th to 3rd centruy B.C. Head of Tanit left / Horse. TextImage AE17 Carthage AE17. 264-241 BC. Head of Tanit left / horse standing right, palm tree behind. TextObvRev Jenkins 14 Sear #6446 ...
ZEUGITANE - CARTHAGE (264-201 avant J.-C.) Trihémistatère, un et demi shekel ou tridrachme en électrum - c. 264-241 AC. N° v18_0149 ...
Carthage and Siculo-Punic Issues GB146. Zeugitania, Carthage, late 3rd Century BC, AE19. Tanit head left/Horse head rt., small palm below chin, SG 6526ff.
Carthage was operational as a Byzantine mint from 533 - 695 AD. Marks included CAR, KAR, KART, CT.
Carthage/Carthago (near Tunis, North Africa) KART Carthage/Carthago (near Tunis, North Africa) ...
Carthage (K et al.) and Ostia (OST) operated in this period but issued no Genius types.
Carthage under the Romans. Carthage was rebuilt by Julius Caesar, B.C. 45, and in B.C. 29 it was recolonized by Augustus. As a Roman colony it struck bronze coins down to the reign of Tiberius. Inscr., KAR VENERIS, Temple of Venus.
Carthage, Zeugitania 310 - 280 BCE ¬ 20 Obv: Head of Tanit left. Rev: Horse standing right; palm behind. Ex John Jencek ...
After Carthage lost its holdings in Sicily to Rome in the First Punic War, Carthage moved to ..... Click the link for more information. (218-204 BC).
Zeugitana/Carthage. 2nd half of the 3rd century BC Æ18 Obverse: Head of Tanit facing left ...
The mint of Carthage again comes into prominence under the Byzantine emperors, particularly during the reign of Phocas (610-41).
Secondly, the Carthage finds did a great deal to eliminate a strongly anti-Western bias in Byzantine mint studies.
(28), Carthage large billon (12), sestertii (70), Coinstantinian AE (94), Vespasian IVDAEA (16), medieval Hungarian denar (27) 88 (11/95) 820 ancients. 3 color E.
Ancient Carthage provides a good example. The site, which had never been investigated for the Byzantine period, revealed a phenomenon that had not been noticed elsewhere: a strong preference for the nummus, a tiny copper coin easy to lose, ...
The great victory over Carthage in the Second Punic War, at the close of the 3rd century B.C., was one of the major turning points in Roman history.
Ancient Carthage by Brian Holland At the end of the 5th century BC, and long before the devastating wars with Rome known as the Punic Wars, ...
To the West, the prosperous cities of Magna Graecia were soon caught up in struggles involving the competing power of two great city-states, Rome and Carthage.
Byzantine Empire, Constantine IV AD668-685, AV Gold Solidus (4.25 gm), Carthage circa 679-680, Obverse: N - S - COVSP Bearded, hemeted and cuirassed bust three-quarters facing right, holding transverse spear and shield with horseman and enemy motif.
It was the home of Carthage, the principle city of the Carthaginian Empire. After the destruction of Carthage by Rome in the Third Punic Wars, it became a part of the Roman African Province.
In 1792 a group of French investors, with the financial backing of some Swiss creditors, purchased a 630,000 acre lot in upper New York State near the present day town of Carthage to create a colony for upper class French families fleeing from the ...
This was to run the batteries with the gun-boats and transports loaded with supplies, to march his troops down the west side of the River from Milliken's Bend to the vicinity of New Carthage, and there ferry them across to the east bank.
218 - 201 BC 2nd Punic War between Rome and Carthage Because of the enormous demand for coins to pay troops the Roman rulers debase their coinage in purity and weight, causing inflation. p 88-89 ...
Indulgence of the emperors to Carthage. Iovi Conservatori Augg NN (to) Jupiter, conservator of our emperors.
Helmeted bust facing / Large X between N and M. (Sear Byz. 876) F. Carthage mint. Coin is a little better than the scan, but is somewhat rough. Even medium dark brown patina. Most of the legend is readable. $25 REDUCED TO $20 ...
For $10 or $20, you can own a bronze coin that circulated during the time of Archimedes or St. Paul. Most collectors of ancients work on themes: the Twelve Caesars, the town of Carthage, the goddess Diana, etc.
on Ptolemaic coinage since the very beginning of the century, and it has been suggested that Ptolemy IV Philopator may have provided gold for this issue to act as a counterweight to the involvement of Philip V of Macedon on the side of Carthage.[13] ...
London, Treveri, Lugdunum, Ticinum, Aquileia, Rome, Ostia, Carthage, Siscia, Serdica, Thessalonica, Heraclea, Nicomedia, Cyzicus, Antioch, Alexandria RIC VII ...
See also: Coin, Revers, Reverse, Struck, Legend
 
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