Author Topic: Constantinopolis coins from the Nether Compton Hoard  (Read 378 times)

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Offline Victor

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Constantinopolis coins from the Nether Compton Hoard
« on: March 12, 2021, 10:47:58 AM »

from the latest CNG auction-- three Constantinopolis coins from the Nether Compton Hoard

quote from CNG--


“This massive hoard of 22,670 Roman coins was found by Mike Pittard while metal detecting in a field near Nether Compton on 19 February 1989. The field is by the side of a trackway, the other side of which is a known Roman building. The actual finding of the hoard was photographed and the report was published in The Searcher magazine (Issue 44, April 1989). The hoard was deposited with the Yeovil Museum by the finder in 1989. It was subsequently returned to the finder, sold, and dispersed through the trade in 1994. No detailed record was made of the contents of the hoard. The pottery vessel and some 33 additional coins that had remained stuck to the pot were donated to the museum and remain there. Although the Nether Compton Hoard was never recorded or published, a limited amount of information has been gleaned from people who have handled it or part of it. It was a very large mid-Constantinian hoard and typical in composition, with all but about 7% consisting of the very common bronze issues of the AD 330s (the Urbs Roma and Constantinopolis commemoratives and the Gloria Exercitus type in the names of Constantine I and his sons). There were no coins of the two Victories type, suggesting that the hoard was deposited around AD 339.”


the first coin is an error and was struck without an obverse

the second coin is a brockage

and the third coin is an unofficial issue