Ancient Coins:
ROMAN REPUBLICAN BRONZE:
C. Marcius Censorinus, 88 B.C. ex: Hamburger 1932
C. Marcius Censorinus, 88 B.C. ex: Hamburger 1932
AE As, 13.56g. 26.5mm. NVMA POMPILI ANCVS MARCI. Jugate heads of Numa Pompilius, bearded, and Ancus Marcius, beardless, to right; both wearing diadems. Rev. C CENSO ROMA. Ship sheds at Ostia depicted as two arches; one containing a spiral column with Victory holding a wreath and one with a ship’s prow. CR 346/3. Syd. 716. BMC RR 2419. Banti, Marcia 72/1(this coin). Brown and green patina. Scarce with an impressive pedigree and among the finest known examples.
The obverse portrays the founder of the Marcia family Ancus Marcius and his purported grandfather Numa Pompilius, the second king of Rome. The reverse with its depiction of ship enclosures is the earliest numismatic reference to the port of Ostia. It relates to the mythical founding of the port by Ancus Marcius, a claimed ancestor of the moneyer.
Provenance/Pedigree:
Ex: Leo Hamburger, Frankfurt, Auction 95, 1932, lot 179.
Ex: Bank Leu, Zurich, Auction 2, 1972, lot 332.
Ex: Goodman collection, Trition, NY, Auction 1, 1997, lot 1157.
See more detailed image
good Very Fine $7,500.
Back to Main Themes page |
Back to Naval and Marine |
Back to ROMAN REPUBLICAN BRONZE
Comments and questions to
webmaster@coin.com
Copyright © 1995-2024 Edward J. Waddell, Ltd. All rights reserved.