Vol. |
№ |
Province |
Region |
City |
Issue |
Dating |
Magistrates |
Denomination |
Person(s) |
Obv. inscription |
Obv. design |
Rev. inscription |
Rev. design |
Reference |
Note |
Internal note |
Coin Number |
Museum |
Inventory Number |
Bibliography |
Weight |
Diameter |
Axis |
Quantity |
Obv. die |
Rev. die |
Obv. cmks |
Rev. cmks |
Note |
Obv. img |
Rev. img |
Plate |
Uri |
link |
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
1
|
L
|
1936,0220.13
|
ex T.O. Mabbott, ex Froehner (Ratto 1909), lot 1267
|
7.46
|
20
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
kept with Tyndaris
|
no |
no |
no |
https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/C_1936-0220-13
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
2
|
P
|
2189
|
|
8.63
|
20
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8589114p
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
3
|
|
|
Palermo = Gabrici 63
|
7.56
|
20
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
4
|
|
|
Palermo = Gabrici 64
|
7.92
|
20
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
5
|
Turin
|
|
FITA 237 n. 1
|
|
20
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
6
|
Turin
|
|
FITA 237 n. 1
|
|
20
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
7
|
Bern
|
R2916
|
|
9.2
|
20
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
8
|
L
|
1999,0508.1
|
ex RBW
|
8.27
|
20
|
9
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
kept with Tyndaris. L STATI P COTTA II[ ]
|
no |
no |
no |
https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/C_1999-0508-1
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
9
|
|
|
PV Coll., ex Naumann 63, 4 Mar. 2018, lot 692
|
7.85
|
21
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
AVGVSTVS [A]CRAC / COTTA II V[
|
no |
no |
no |
https://www.coinarchives.com/a/openlink.php?l=1217873|2414|692|87f06af8ccdf193ed3aad314cd3ce13d
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
627 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Lucius Statius Flaccus ; Lucius Mussidius Longus |
Æ (20 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS ACRAG[ ]
|
bare head of Augustus, right
|
L STATI P COTTA IIV[IR], L MVSSIDI PR COS
|
inscription in wreath
|
Gabrici 63–4, Holm 755 corr., Cop 1100, FITA 237
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur: these coins were formerly attributed to Tyndaris in RPC, following P. Pitotto, ‘Un esemplare di Mussidio Longo per Augusto e la questione della zecca di Tindari’, Annotazioni Numismatiche 22, Giugno 1996, p. 494) and others, but the new coin no 10 in the PV collection has a clear ethnic and shows that they must be given to Agrigentum (P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN 61.2 (2024), p. 6-16). Since other specimens offer a legend running around the wreath on the reverse (3, 8 and 9) including the names of the duovirs L. STA(tius) and P. COTTA which also appear on the coins of Sisenna procos. (RPC I, 668), the latter group must also be attributed to this municipium in spite of Martini's reservations (p. 71 n. 51). R. J. A. Wilson advises us that Cotta is probably a Latinized version of a Greek name (and a Κoτης appears at second century Agrigentum and Malta), while a Κoτας is attested from the same period in Camarina (P.M. Fraser and E. Matthews, A Lexicon of Greek Personal Names vol. III.A (Oxford, 1997), p. 256). And BA on 668 (see below) might be the beginning of a Greek name and there are plenty of candidates (see Lexicon). The original numbering of specimens has been changed: delete 627/5 (Cop 1100), 627/6 = 627/5, 627/7 = 627/6, 627/8 = 627/7 , 627/8 is a new specimen and 627/9 = 627/1. See the article by Villemur for a very full discussion and a die study.
|
Reverse type corrected from ACRAC to ACRAG based on clearly visible specimen (PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450), which would be expected for the Latin transliteration of the usual Greek ethnic here (i.e. ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ).
|
10
|
|
|
PV Coll., ex Artemide Kunstauktionen e-Live 27, 1–2 Apr. 2023, lot 450
|
9.11
|
23.6
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
yes |
https://www.biddr.com/auctions/artemideauktionen/browse?a=3394&l=3886099
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
658 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (22 mm)
|
Augustus |
ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ
|
head (of Augustus?), right
|
ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ
|
head (of Agrippa?), right
|
Holm 736, BMC 165
|
A similar coin in Manchester (7.28) seems to have been altered to have legends reading M ΛΕΠΙΔΟΣ[ and [ ]KAIΣΑΡ, though it is not definitely a specimen of this issue.
|
|
1
|
L
|
|
BMC 165
|
8.21
|
22
|
6
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
yes |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
658 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (22 mm)
|
Augustus |
ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ
|
head (of Augustus?), right
|
ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ
|
head (of Agrippa?), right
|
Holm 736, BMC 165
|
A similar coin in Manchester (7.28) seems to have been altered to have legends reading M ΛΕΠΙΔΟΣ[ and [ ]KAIΣΑΡ, though it is not definitely a specimen of this issue.
|
|
2
|
Milan
|
Arslan 147
|
Salinas 341
|
7.34
|
22
|
6
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
658 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (22 mm)
|
Augustus |
ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ
|
head (of Augustus?), right
|
ΑΚΡΑΓΑΝΤΙΝΩΝ
|
head (of Agrippa?), right
|
Holm 736, BMC 165
|
A similar coin in Manchester (7.28) seems to have been altered to have legends reading M ΛΕΠΙΔΟΣ[ and [ ]KAIΣΑΡ, though it is not definitely a specimen of this issue.
|
|
3
|
NY
|
2015.20.551
|
RBW ex Superior, 6 Nov. 1994
|
9.96
|
21.8
|
6
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
http://numismatics.org/collection/2015.20.551
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
659 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (16 mm)
|
|
|
triskeles with gorgon face
|
AGRIGENT
|
in wreath
|
Holm 735a, FITA 191
|
Reign uncertain. It seems that the legend originally read GENTINE(?) (for AGRIGENTINE?); this was subsequently recut to AGRIGENT.
|
|
1
|
NY
|
1944.100.8282
|
SNG 1149
|
7.17
|
16
|
12
|
1
|
|
5583
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
http://numismatics.org/collection/1944.100.8282
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
659 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (16 mm)
|
|
|
triskeles with gorgon face
|
AGRIGENT
|
in wreath
|
Holm 735a, FITA 191
|
Reign uncertain. It seems that the legend originally read GENTINE(?) (for AGRIGENTINE?); this was subsequently recut to AGRIGENT.
|
|
2
|
P
|
162
|
Salinas 350
|
5.45
|
16
|
|
1
|
|
5583
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b85995165
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
659 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (16 mm)
|
|
|
triskeles with gorgon face
|
AGRIGENT
|
in wreath
|
Holm 735a, FITA 191
|
Reign uncertain. It seems that the legend originally read GENTINE(?) (for AGRIGENTINE?); this was subsequently recut to AGRIGENT.
|
|
3
|
O
|
|
SNG 1688
|
6.18
|
16
|
|
1
|
|
5583
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
659 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (16 mm)
|
|
|
triskeles with gorgon face
|
AGRIGENT
|
in wreath
|
Holm 735a, FITA 191
|
Reign uncertain. It seems that the legend originally read GENTINE(?) (for AGRIGENTINE?); this was subsequently recut to AGRIGENT.
|
|
4
|
B
|
I-B
|
|
4.68
|
16
|
|
1
|
|
5583
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
659 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (16 mm)
|
|
|
triskeles with gorgon face
|
AGRIGENT
|
in wreath
|
Holm 735a, FITA 191
|
Reign uncertain. It seems that the legend originally read GENTINE(?) (for AGRIGENTINE?); this was subsequently recut to AGRIGENT.
|
|
5
|
B
|
I-B
|
|
5.15
|
16
|
|
1
|
|
5583
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
659 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (16 mm)
|
|
|
triskeles with gorgon face
|
AGRIGENT
|
in wreath
|
Holm 735a, FITA 191
|
Reign uncertain. It seems that the legend originally read GENTINE(?) (for AGRIGENTINE?); this was subsequently recut to AGRIGENT.
|
|
6
|
|
|
Calciati 155
|
4.87
|
16
|
|
1
|
|
5583
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
659 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
|
Æ (16 mm)
|
|
|
triskeles with gorgon face
|
AGRIGENT
|
in wreath
|
Holm 735a, FITA 191
|
Reign uncertain. It seems that the legend originally read GENTINE(?) (for AGRIGENTINE?); this was subsequently recut to AGRIGENT.
|
|
7
|
|
|
Bertolami 4, 5 Dec. 2011, lot 8
|
|
12
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
yes |
https://www.coinarchives.com/a/openlink.php?l=449369|821|8|b42d15240c9075c343f762590f4baa36
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
1
|
L
|
|
BMC 160
|
10.46
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
2
|
L
|
|
BMC 161
|
8.99
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 290 (boar r.? (on reverse)) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
3
|
L
|
|
BMC 162
|
8.46
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 290 (boar r.? (on reverse)) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
4
|
L
|
|
BMC 163
|
8.42
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
5
|
L
|
|
BMC 164
|
7.14
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
6
|
NY
|
1944.100.8283
|
SNG 1150
|
8.09
|
23
|
12
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
no |
http://numismatics.org/collection/1944.100.8283
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
7
|
NY
|
1953.171.503
|
|
11.3
|
23
|
12
|
1
|
|
|
GIC 483 (?, object or monogram) |
|
|
no |
no |
no |
http://numismatics.org/collection/1953.171.503
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
8
|
NY
|
Holzer
|
|
7.23
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 290 (boar r.? (on reverse)) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
9
|
NY
|
Holzer
|
|
8.22
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 290 (boar r.? (on reverse)) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
10
|
NY
|
Holzer
|
|
12.71
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
11
|
NY
|
Holzer
|
|
7.52
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 290 (boar r.? (on reverse)) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
12
|
B
|
I-B
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
13
|
B
|
I-B
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
14
|
B
|
I-B
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
15
|
B
|
Löbb.
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
16
|
B
|
7395
|
|
10.41
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
17
|
P
|
163
|
|
8.84
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8599517k
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
18
|
Mu
|
206
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
19
|
Mu
|
207
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 290 (boar r.? (on reverse)) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
20
|
Mu
|
208
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
21
|
Mu
|
209
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
22
|
C
|
94/1948
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
23
|
C
|
93/1948
|
|
11.3
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 290 (boar r.? (on reverse)) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
24
|
|
|
Palermo = Gabrici 158
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
25
|
|
|
Calciati 150
|
8.98
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
26
|
|
|
Calciati 150
|
10.2
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
GIC 290 (boar r.? (on reverse)) |
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
27
|
|
|
Calciati 150
|
7.95
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
28
|
N
|
4066
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
29
|
N
|
S 7477
|
|
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
30
|
Bern
|
R4277
|
|
9.09
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
31
|
|
|
JSW
|
9.42
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
32
|
|
|
Hess Nov. 1979, no. 66
|
9.02
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
33
|
Verona
|
|
|
8.61
|
|
12
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
34
|
|
|
P. Villemur coll. = CNG MBS 78, 14 May 2008, lot 1155 (ex Finarte 26 Nov. 1996, lot 702)
|
8
|
23
|
12
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
no |
https://www.coinarchives.com/a/openlink.php?l=213380|293|1155|81c271f4c2662c6430b5eed24afdb7fd
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
35
|
|
|
CNG MBS 78, 14 May 2008, lot 1154
|
8.12
|
23.5
|
12
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
yes |
https://www.coinarchives.com/a/openlink.php?l=213379|293|1154|b46edd4f5c8965d8b950e43e7dc50b2e
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
36
|
|
|
Naumann 50, 5 Feb. 2017, lot 290
|
12.54
|
22
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://www.coinarchives.com/a/openlink.php?l=1000820|1944|290|73ffbe3f4190c70d791a508ca6326d85
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
37
|
|
|
Naumann 100, F. Jarman coll., 7 Mar. 2021, lot 1088
|
11.31
|
22
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
38
|
|
|
Bertolami Fine Arts - ACR Auctions 236, 24 Sep. 2022, lot 719
|
10.11
|
24
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
39
|
|
|
Roma Numismatics -the Anders collection, 8 Sep. 2022, lot 935
|
8.8
|
21
|
9
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
660 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
after 2 BC
|
Lucius Clodius Rufus ; Sextus Rufus ; Salassus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTO P P AGRIGE(N)TI(N)
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SALASSO COMITIALE SEX RVFO IIVIR, L CLODIO RVFO PROCOS
|
plough
|
Holm 735, BMC 160, Gabrici 158, FITA 196
|
Friedlander thought (ZfN, 1877, 337) that the plough had a bird sitting on it, and therefore that it was a countermark of Centuripae, but the bird and the attribution seem very unlikely. See Martini, Sicilia nos 140-74. One of the duoviri (Sextus Rufus) is now known as a duumvir from a Greek inscription from the gymnasium at Agrigento (R.J.A. Wilson, ‘Archaeology in Sicily 1988-95’, Archaeological Reports for 1995-1996 (1996), p. 87). R.J.A. Wilson advises that comitialis is probably a title (‘convenor of the comitium’) rather than a name (see his Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990), p. 42 caption with fig. 32c.
|
axis 12 or 6
|
40
|
|
|
CNG MBS 78, 14 May 2008, lot 1156
|
8
|
23
|
12
|
1
|
|
|
|
GIC 426 (plough?) |
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
1
|
L
|
1954,1014.34
|
|
5.82
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/C_1954-1014-34
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
2
|
P
|
1005
|
|
10.16
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b85891153
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
3
|
P
|
1006
|
|
7.98
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8589116h
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
4
|
|
|
Palermo = Gabrici 337
|
7.86
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
5
|
|
|
Palermo = Gabrici 338
|
6.32
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
6
|
|
|
Mini Panoramus 41
|
9.25
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
7
|
|
|
Mini Panoramus 42
|
11.7
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
reading SISII{NA}, and having a star instead of an inscription on the obverse: an imitation?
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
8
|
|
|
Calciati Panoramus 40
|
7.9
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
9
|
|
|
Calciati Panoramus 40
|
6.99
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
10
|
|
|
Calciati Panoramus 40
|
6.16
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
11
|
NY
|
1944.100.10123
|
SNG 611
|
7.22
|
23
|
6
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
http://numismatics.org/collection/1944.100.10123
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
12
|
|
|
Schweizerische Kreditanstalt 7 (1987) lot 783 = CNG Triton XI, 8 Jan. 2008, lot 422
|
7.06
|
21
|
9
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
yes |
https://www.coinarchives.com/a/openlink.php?l=201526|265|422|cb304967e6838e2717a0e0dc37839f18
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
13
|
Bern
|
R4278
|
|
8.79
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
14
|
Zurich
|
(Corinth) ZB640
|
|
9.04
|
23
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
15
|
Hannover
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
under Corinth
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
16
|
Verona
|
|
|
6.42
|
|
6
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
17
|
Yale
|
2004.6.911
|
ex PRF
|
7.78
|
21
|
1
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://artgallery.yale.edu/collections/objects/110129
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
18
|
|
|
RBW coll.
|
8.82
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
the reverse legend is SISIINA/PR COS /L STAT/P COTA
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
19
|
|
|
Tintinna EA 82, 7 Sept. 2019, lot 181
|
9.42
|
20
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
20
|
B
|
18263668, 1904/70
|
|
7.62
|
23
|
8
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://ikmk.smb.museum/object?id=18263668
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
21
|
B
|
18263675, I-B
|
|
8.32
|
23
|
3
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://ikmk.smb.museum/object?id=18263675
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
22
|
B
|
18263677, 1875/15
|
|
8.5
|
23
|
10
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
https://ikmk.smb.museum/object?id=18263677
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
23
|
|
|
Bertolami Fine Arts EA 77, 1 Dec. 2019, lot 1073
|
7.79
|
22
|
9
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
24
|
|
|
CGT coll. = Tintinnia Asta Elettronica 46, 16 May 2015, lot 2003
|
7.39
|
22
|
1
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|
I |
668 |
Sicily
|
Sicily
|
Agrigentum
|
|
|
Publius Cotta Ba— ; Sisenna ; Lucius Statius Flaccus |
Æ (23 mm)
|
Augustus |
AVGVSTVS
|
head of Augustus, right
|
SISENNA (or SISIINNA) PR COS, (L) STATI(VS) FLACCVS P COTTA BA IIVIR
|
wreath
|
Holm, 761b, Gabrici Panormus 337, FITA 196
|
New comment (2024), with thanks to P. Villemur. See also NC, 1852, p. 123. Since this series shares the names of the duovirs who struck RPC 627, it must be attributed to Agrigentum as well (see P. Villemur, 'Les émissions augustéennes frappées à Agrigente au nom des proconsuls de Sicile L. Mussidius et Sisenna', BCEN vol. 61, n° 2, mai-août 2024, p. 6-16) . The praenomen L for Statius Flaccus, which is absent on most of the coins, clearly appears on one die (n° 17, 18 and 19) and on some coins of the Mussidius issue -- See also Martini, Sicilia nos. 111-133 (accepting the inclusion of the praenomen L), and now on 627, above. Some specimens appear to have part of one of the duovir’s names in the wreath: Martini 128-30, 129 curiously seeming to read ]STA B[. One has a star behind Augustus’ head (Martini 132)'. See Villemur's article for a full discussion and a die study.
|
|
25
|
|
|
CNG 130, 4 Jan. 2006, lot 278
|
6.08
|
22
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
|
no |
no |
no |
|
[show]
[edit]
|