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A sharp Roman Antoninianus of Philip I, better known as Philip the Arab, struck before Rome’s coinage completely face-planted into the discount bin of imperial financial stupidity.
The obverse shows Philip with a bold radiate crown and strong portrait detail — not one of those mushy, half-dead Roman slugs where you need imagination, prayer, and poor lighting to see an emperor. The legends are mostly there, the bust has real presence, and the coin still looks like something Rome meant to spend before the accountants started replacing silver with lies.
The reverse features Aequitas, goddess of fairness and balance, seated with scales — which is rich, considering Rome was already debasing its currency like a casino with an army. Still, the design is attractive, readable, and packed with exactly the kind of ancient irony collectors love.
XRF reads 65.48% silver, with 33.70% copper, giving this piece a stronger metal profile than the later third-century trash discs that were basically bronze wearing silver makeup.
A good-looking, legitimate, high-silver billon Antoninianus with solid detail, real eye appeal, and just enough Roman economic hypocrisy to make it fun.
4.0g | 23mm | XRF: 65.48% Silver
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jun 29 - Jul 4
US$40
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