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Electrum

Numismatic ElectrotypeEliasberg

electrum
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition
Electrum is a naturally occurring alloy An alloy is a combination, either in solution or compound, of two or more elements, at least one of which is a metal.

 


Electrum coin of the Byzantine Emperor Alexius I Comnenus.
Electrum is a naturally occurring alloy of gold and silver, with trace amounts of copper and other metals.

electrum: Naturally occurring alloy of gold and silver used for early coins of the Mediterranean region.
elongated coin: An oval medalet produced by a roller die using a coin, token or medal as a planchet usually a cent.

Electrum Stater Of Miletos
The most famous coin type of ancient Miletus, and one of the earliest of all coins that can be attributed to a particular city, is the electrum stater that features a crouching lion regardant on the obverse, ...

electrum: a natural alloy of gold and silver, used to make some of the first coins.
elements: the various designs, lettering, and markings on a coin.

Electrum - A naturally occurring alloy of silver and gold. The earliest coins of ancient Asia Minor and many Byzantine issues were struck in this alloy.
Elements - The various devices and designs seen on coins.

Electrum
A naturally occurring alloy of gold and silver. The earliest coins in the Western world were struck from this metal in Lydia, in what is now western Turkey, where nuggets of electrum occur naturally.

Electrum Naturally occurring amalgam of gold and silver.
Epigraphy Study of ancient inscriptions.
Exergue The space at the bottom of a coin on the reverse side, sometimes separated by a line.

Electrum
A natural or created alloy of gold and silver.
Exergue ...

electrum - a natural or man-made alloy of gold and silver, first used for coinage by the Lydians.
exergue - an area separate from the main design of a coin, usually defined by a line.

Electrum - A natural mixture of gold and silver.
Engraving - Engraving of currency is a reverse process wher grooves are scraped into metal plates by the use of sharp instruments.

electrum - A mixture of silver and gold that happens naturally. Some of the first coins ever produced were made of this alloy.

ELECTRUM COINAGE.
Circ. B.C. 500.
Among the early electrum staters of the Milesian standard there is one which has been conjecturally assigned to Methymna, but the attri- bution is very doubtful:— ...

ELECTRUM. Circ. B.C. 500.
Rough incuse square. [Num. Chron., 1875, Pl. VII. 7.]
EL. 217 grs.

Electrum
alloy of gold and silver (at least 20%) of varying purity.
Equestrian ...

Electrum - A natural mixture of gold and silver.
Error - Any deviation in the minting process causing one or more coins to be struck with a different appearance than intended. ...

Electrum - A natural mixture of gold and silver.
Exergue - That portion of a coin beneath the main design generally separated by an exergual line.
Field - That portion of a coin's surface not used for a design or inscription.

Carthage Electrum Didrachm. 350-270 BC. Head of Tanit left wreathed with corn / horse standing right.
( 2 entries)
Sear #6472 ...

AV= Gold EL= Electrum (a natural alloy of gold and silver)
Greek Gold coinage
Roman Gold Coinage ...

Among other coins depicting an Attic helmet are electrum staters of Kyzikos (Sear Greek 3478) and Seleukos I tetradrachms portraying Alexander/Seleukos I (Sear Greek 6833).

161 G gold and electrum, 227 G, 34 RR, 155 RI, 41 RP, 80 Byz, 10 DA.
Greek gold and electrum (161) ...

The bull facing lion on the first electrum coins minted in Lydia surely relate to Taurus, represented in the constellation as the forepart of the bull, and Leo, the Nemean lion. There are several reasons why the Lydians may have used these symbols.

Pour le groupe Xb, les auteurs du Carthagian Gold and Electrum coins, les auteurs ont répertorié quarante-neuf pièces pour ce groupe avec quarante-quatre coins de droit et quarante-trois de revers avec quarante-quatre combinaisons.

From the clam shells of Pismo Beach of the depression days of 1933 to the irregularly shaped electrum half-stater of Ionia of about 650 B.C.

Many of the early coins were struck in electrum, a natural amalgam of gold and silver which was comparatively plentiful in Asia Minor, where it was washed down from the mountains by the rivers.

However, the first coins were electrum, a naturally- occurring alloy of gold and silver. No one could have guaranteed the fineness of an electrum coin.

The first coins were electrum, a natural alloy of gold and silver. Then King Kroisos (Croesus) invented silver coins and gold coins during his reign (561-546 B.C.). Those coins of Lydia had a lion and a bull on one side, a dent on the other.

This earliest coinage was struck in a mixture of gold and silver we call "electrum". Soon the two metals were separated and a ratio of value between the two was established.

They were made from electrum , a natural alloy of gold and silver found in the rivers of the region, and had a design on one face and a punch mark or seal on the other.

Stater - Any of various gold, silver or electrum coin units or coins of the ancient Greek states or cities.
{From Late Latin stater from Greek stater, akin to histanai meaning to place in the balance, literally to make stand.}
[Ancient Greek States] ...

Unlike some other electrum coins, say some Celtic and some Byzantine, those covered by Bodenstedt are never silver in appearance.

Coins originated in Asia Minor about 650 bc, when symbols guaranteeing weight and purity were first impressed onto small pieces of electrum, a naturally occurring alloy of gold and silver.

The old monetary system was replaced by 4 denominations - the gold hyperperon, the electrum aspron trachy (1/3 of the hyperperon), the billon aspron trachy (1/48 of the hyperperon), and a copper tetarteron.

The coins were struck from electrum, a naturally occurring alloy of gold and silver that was found in quantity in the mountains and streams of the country. The obverse design was incuse, or sunk into the coin, and the reverse was left blank.

Alloy - A combination of two or more metals, such as electrum or cupro-nickel.

c. 640 - c. 630 BC The first true coins produced in Lydia
The earliest coins made in Lydia, Asia Minor, consisted of electrum, a naturally occurring amalgam of gold and silver.
p 61-63 ...

This last abbreviation is used generically to describe any coin consisting principally of copper; when it appears in prose, aes is frequently translated as bronze.3 Occasionally the abbreviations El (= electrum) and Bi (= billon, ...

3 Occasionally the abbreviations El (= electrum) and Bi (= billon, an alloy of silver in which the silver comprises less than 50%) are encountered, and Cu is becoming more common to describe copper.

But unlike Indian punch-marked coins, Greek coins had inscriptions, they were round in shape, were stamped on both the sides and minted using silver, electrum and gold too.

See also: Silver, Gold, Coinage, Coin, Struck