$250 Ancient Silver Coin Purchase Unboxing: Denarius & Antoninianus (And History) w/Spencer Miller
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- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
- I recently bought about another $250 in silver ancient coins from Spencer Miller / millerancients , and wanted to provide a bit of history and context as to what the coins mean (and learn a bunch from Spencer in the process). We covered a lot of different coins, including denarii and antoniniani, as well as rulers, such as Gordian, Septimius Severus, Philip, and more. This is what I'd call a must-watch video... I had so much fun in the process of creating it, and look forward to adding a lot of these coins to my collection, as well as some of the grab bags and auctions that I'll be running going forward.
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All materials in these videos are used for educational purposes to inform and build community around coins, and fall within the guidelines of fair use. No copyright infringement is intended. If you are or represent the copyright owner of materials used in this video and have a problem with the use of said material, please contact me via my email in the "about" page on my channel.
*Even though I don't collect ancient coins, I find their stories very interesting. Thanks for the info mate.*
At the beginning of the video you mention that the collection you’re describing is worth about $250. Did you possibly misspeak? For instance, the Caracalla coin alone (as a young Caesar) in decent condition sells for around $250. Please explain. Thanks.
We know Philip the Arab's wife was a Christian. We don't know about him, but I'd say it could be 50/50 chances.
Hello Sir Parimal Sampat Mumbai India 🇮🇳💫🌟💫
These ancient coins are rich with history ... one wonders if some historical figures touched them.
Another great video. Thanks for the history
A denarius was a day's pay at the beginning of the 1st century AD. By the time of Antoninus
Pius it was more like 2 to 3 denarii. These are all very common coins. Worth about what you paid for them.
Awesome assortment of Roman Imperial Coins. And: good to see that the owner kept the patina on some of them ! The different look on the denarii of Septimius Severus depends on where they were minted. "Rough" appearing coins were mostly minted in Eastern regions of the Roman Empire at that time. Greets from GER, U.
Thx for a great informative video on Roman history 👍 enjoyed it very much thx for sharing
Great video! I would love to have a coin or two that are ancient Roman. That would be amazing.
Very nice!
Spencer Miller instagram isn't working.
🔥🔥🔥
Awesome