Category: Earrings

  • Denarius of Julius Caesar Coin Earrings

    Denarius of Julius Caesar Coin Earrings

    Superb high-quality reproduction silver plated coin earrings by Coin Carnival.  These coins were originally minted by the great Roman general & dictator Julius Caesar to pay his soldiers. The design features an elephant trampling a serpent with “Caesar” inscribed below.  The coins are approximately 19 millimeters in diameter.

    Denarius of Julius Caesar History

    The ‘elephant’ coinage of Caesar, struck beginning around the time he crossed the Rubicon in January 49, was used to pay Caesar’s forces during the Civil war with Pompey. It was produced using at least 750 obverse dies, thus implying that at least 7-8 million denarii were struck! These coins have been popular with collectors since the Renaissance and a great number are known; however, truly superb examples  are remarkably scarce.

     

     

  • Aegina Sea Turtles Ancient Greek coin earrings

    Aegina Sea Turtles Ancient Greek coin earrings

    Aegina Sea Turtles earrings by Coin Carnival

    Very interesting history behind those Sea Turtles coins.  The coins I use are the re-strike sand silver plated (they are not original coins however I can use original coins if you wish but you have to provide them … hmm at an average $1500 USD per coin maybe it is better to stick to my silver plated re-strikes).

     

    Aegina Sea Turtles

    Aegina, an island 30 km (about 20 miles) southwest of Athens, was the first Greek city to mass-produce silver coinage, possibly as early as 580 BCE.

    These coins bore the city’s badge: a sea turtle.

    Aegina traded in silver long before the invention of coinage, and one theory is that the turtle was chosen because primitive silver ingots had a rounded “turtle-back” shape. Trace element analysis indicates that the silver came from mines on the island of Sifnos (or Siphnos), about 130 km (80 miles) to the southeast.

    The “Aeginetan” weight standard included a didrachm or stater of 12.2 grams, a drachmaof 6.1 grams, a hemidrachm or triobol of about three grams and an obol of one gram. The staters are the most common, and have been found in hoards and single finds across the ancient world, often heavily worn from circulation, slashed with test cuts and pocked with “banker’s marks” (small punches that probably validated a coin as “good” in a particular marketplace).

    The reverse of the coins bear a variety of geometric punch-marks: a “Union Jack” (a rectangle with intersecting lines resembling the pattern of the British flag), a “mill sail” (four triangles arranged like the sails of a windmill), and a “skew” (a cross with one diagonal line from the center).

    Aegina Land Tortoises

    Athens and Aegina were commercial and political rivals. In 456 BCE, Athens forced Aegina to pay an annual tribute of 30 talents. About 25 years later, Athens exiled the Aeginetans, replacing them with Athenian colonists. In 404 the surviving exiles were allowed to return, but Aegina never recovered its power or prosperity.

    At some point in the fifth century BCE, the land tortoise replaced the sea turtle on the obverse of Aegina’s coinage.

    Numismatists once considered this a symbolic reflection of Aegina’s loss of naval power, but this is now considered improbable. Most of the tortoise types seem to date from the period 350-338 BCE, but there are examples that seem to be from much earlier dates.