Ancient Coin Collectors Guild
Numismatic Society of South Australia
American Numismatic Society
American Numismatic Association

All Tags

Plate Coin

Plate coins are illustrated in the plates of published works. Often these will be from die-studies, published collections, or works that are considered standard references but may also include articles in numismatic journals. The attraction to collectors is that their coin can be seen in a publication and the owner can be more confident about their authenticity.

Hoard Coin

Coins which were discovered in a documented hoard. Typically these will be documented in the Coin Hoards series. The attraction to collectors is that they form part of an archaeological discovery and that their authenticity can thus be established by reference to the hoard they were found in.

Pedigreed

Coins which were part of a well-known or established collection are 'pedigreed' if their provenance can be established e.g. via auction records, coin flip inserts, or other information. Often it can be established that these coins were in collections decades (or longer) earlier. Their attraction to collectors are numerous but principally they are considered less likely to be modern forgeries given their provenance can be dated to periods prior to many of the modern counterfeits found today.

Signed Dies

Dies were sometimes signed by the die-engravers in antiquity. Coins from these dies are highly sought out as they are signs the coin was made from the dies of a master die-engraver.

Unpublished

This coin is not published in any references known to Ancient Coin Traders.

Unique

This coin is unique. No other specimens were found in standard references, online auction archives, or otherwise known to Ancient Coin Traders.

Best of Type

This coin is the best specimen of its type known to Ancient Coin Traders.

Find Patina

Find patina describes that patina originally found on silver coins when discovered. This is typically darker, and may be thicker, than that the toning which naturally develops on silver coins in collections.

Finest Style

This label is reserved from those coins which were struck from dies of the finest style. These dies often the masterpieces of master engravers.

Historically Significant

All coins are historically significant. This label is reserved for those coins which mark the happening of something particularly important in antiquity.

Rare

Rare coins are more than scarce. They are difficult to find. They will not often be available for sale or listed in auctions. Sometimes only a handful of specimens will exist.

Certified

Coins which are certified have been evaluated by a professional certification services. Typically they will be sealed within a plastic holder and have a barcode / registration number which can be looked up on a database of the certifier. These coins will attract a premium due to the cost of obtaining certification services.

Published

This coin is published in a publication. Published coins may or may not also be illustrated as Plate Coins.

Ancient Counterfeits

Coins have been counterfeited for probably as long as coinage itself. Ancient counterfeits range in quality, from closely resembling the official issues, to crude attempts to do so. In many cases, these counterfeits use a base metal core, which is then plated, or pressed with a precious metal. Such coins are known as fourrees.