I think you mixed up some info bro! The quadrans and Ases are made of copper, the semis, dupondius and sestertius are made or brass :) And your Domitian coin is actually an As, as it doesnt have a radiate crown. Siliqua is singular, Siliquae is plural. Miliarensis, singular, Miliarense, plural.
Few things were messed up. I had to rush the video today. I didn't have time to re-record. When editing i have to combine dialogue that I messed up. That's why the plural forms are out of wack. I pinned your comment btw.
@@coindoctor5035 Really glad to help. Your videos inspired me to shuffle around my own collection and make some videos myself. I just need a proper tripod to hold my phone in place and Ill get some out :)
Ya Im going to try to make videos with my own collection more. I sold a bunch of coins so im going to use that money to get more inventory for the vids.
My apologies if I'm misunderstanding something here, but I just wanted to ask... what was Roman currency backed by? Like how, for instance, today, we say the USD is "fiat", or how it was one point it was supposedly back by the gold in Fort Knox. Did the Romans have their money "backed" by anything? Again, just trynna learn and figure some things out here.
so, in the beginning it was set based on the melt value of the coin, then it quickly inflated and was backed by decree of the roman senate and, or the emperor.... on many brass and bronze or copper coins the coin is labeled with the large letters S C which stands for Senatus Cunsulto which means by decree of the senate which meant that the senate had made a public decree in the roman nation that coins struck with their S C mark had such and such value even if the coin itself wasn't indeed worth face value in metal content, its fun to explore these and see the thousands of varieties that were struck all over the roman empire
Glad you liked the video. Theres different pronunciations. Such as the silliquae which some pronounce it with the ae or just the a. Or the As which some call "ass" or as.
I think you mixed up some info bro! The quadrans and Ases are made of copper, the semis, dupondius and sestertius are made or brass :)
And your Domitian coin is actually an As, as it doesnt have a radiate crown.
Siliqua is singular, Siliquae is plural. Miliarensis, singular, Miliarense, plural.
Few things were messed up. I had to rush the video today. I didn't have time to re-record. When editing i have to combine dialogue that I messed up. That's why the plural forms are out of wack. I pinned your comment btw.
@@coindoctor5035 Really glad to help. Your videos inspired me to shuffle around my own collection and make some videos myself. I just need a proper tripod to hold my phone in place and Ill get some out :)
@@leoborros Awesome. Making videos is super fun. If you have a laptop you can just screencast and put the footage in an editor to start out.
'denariuseses'
Hehehe ases
Very cool fact that you actually have these coins and not just showing us pictures of coins!!
Ya Im going to try to make videos with my own collection more. I sold a bunch of coins so im going to use that money to get more inventory for the vids.
@@coindoctor5035 what’s the current price for the Aurius right now?
Very cool...whole lots of As'es.
Still true.
Very educational n informative video. Thank U 4 posting.
My apologies if I'm misunderstanding something here, but I just wanted to ask... what was Roman currency backed by? Like how, for instance, today, we say the USD is "fiat", or how it was one point it was supposedly back by the gold in Fort Knox. Did the Romans have their money "backed" by anything? Again, just trynna learn and figure some things out here.
so, in the beginning it was set based on the melt value of the coin, then it quickly inflated and was backed by decree of the roman senate and, or the emperor.... on many brass and bronze or copper coins the coin is labeled with the large letters S C which stands for Senatus Cunsulto which means by decree of the senate which meant that the senate had made a public decree in the roman nation that coins struck with their S C mark had such and such value even if the coin itself wasn't indeed worth face value in metal content, its fun to explore these and see the thousands of varieties that were struck all over the roman empire
sorry its a bit late but i hope it helps
Hello, I have 8 old coins, how can I send you their pictures?
AE just stands for bronze coins. Like AG is silver and AU is gold.
I have 1x Vima Kadphises Copper Ancient time rare Coin... Plz share this market value...
Where would i buy these coins at mainly the gold and silver ones ???
You can buy them on eBay or coin biding sites personally before I buy a Roman coin I would learn about the history of it
I have the bronze coin in the top right of the thumbnail. Could anybody tell me what this is?
Hello I need your help to value a old coins can you
Great video, I learned a lot.
By the way, I believe ‘Sestertius’ is pronounced “ses-tersh-ius”, (soft T) but I could be wrong.
Glad you liked the video. Theres different pronunciations. Such as the silliquae which some pronounce it with the ae or just the a. Or the As which some call "ass" or as.
So beautiful coins
I truly wish u dont add background music.
I got a peter rabbit 50pence
nice
Bro,A whole video on DEKADRACHM OF SYRACUSA please
Good idea
Thank you , Some nice Asses Man :) QC
16 ases casually
👍🏼
You just wanted to say "ass" over and over.
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