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What’s a fair offer for 3 silver ancient roman coins that my buddy is selling?

My buddy is selling and I’d like to buy them to have a few in my collection. I don’t really know anything about ancients as I’m a U.S coin collector. What’s a fair offer for these three? I’m not the biggest fan of the one with the chunk missing. Is it even real? Thanks for any help!


Comments

  • SimonWSimonW Posts: 1,471 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited April 1, 2026 8:47PM

    I dunno, $150 or so. The last one is nice, probably worth close to a hundred maybe $75, I would think. The Pius probably $50 or so, the one with the chuck missing is Hadrian I think, probably less than $20.

    I'm BACK!!! Used to be Billet7 on the old forum.

  • lordmarcovanlordmarcovan Posts: 44,950 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I'd say $20-ish on the Hadrian, $35-40-ish on the Antoninus Pius, and $50-ish on the Philip the Arab.

    Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.

  • John ConduittJohn Conduitt Posts: 457 ✭✭✭✭

    The problem is, they are all common and you can easily and cheaply get better ones. Those are worth little more that $50 together. The first (Hadrian) is $50 if not broken and overcleaned, so a lot less than that - maybe $5. Who would even want it if you can get a whole one for $30? The Antoninus Pius is worth about $70 in good condition but that one is pretty worn. Maybe $30? The Philip I is at least in better condition but you can buy even better for $40. So $75 for all three without any sort of bulk-buying, private-sale discount.

  • SimonWSimonW Posts: 1,471 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Looks like I shot high

    I'm BACK!!! Used to be Billet7 on the old forum.

  • NapNap Posts: 1,769 ✭✭✭✭✭

    The Hadrian is a fouree, so you are right to question if it’s real.
    I think it is ancient. My presumption is a contemporary counterfeit, plated with silver but of some base metal which can be seen in the areas of damage. The base core makes it more brittle so not surprising it is chipped. The denarii are typically thick good silver coins and don’t chip easily.

  • pcgs69pcgs69 Posts: 4,395 ✭✭✭✭

    Thank you guys for the info and for the history lessons! We have an XRF at work so I'll put the Hadrian on it tomorrow and see what it reads where it's broken (more for curiosity than anything). So looks like the other two are relatively common and not too expensive. I'll try putting them under a metal detector to see if the signal profile differs - more of a curiosity thing too. Thank you all again for taking the time to add your input.

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