THIS IS ONLY A TEST WIKI - the real SILVER wiki is available at https://silver.kbr.be

Property:Remarks

From SILVER
Showing 20 pages using this property.
S
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
https://greekcoinage.org/iris/id/sardo_punic.sng_copenhagen.387-8  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"overstruck on Sardo-Punic (Tanit l./bull r. ; above, large star)"  +
"Overstruck on a denarius of L. Flaminius Chilo (Cr. 302/1) [...] On this specimen the name L. Flaminius Chilo (Crawford 302/1) is clearly visible at three o’clock on the obverse. This overstrike is not listed by Crawford in his table XVIII (pp. 116-117). It is interesting that the Chilo coin was overstruck only 4 years after initially being struck. Perhaps overstriking was more common under the Republic than previously thought, but the undertype was normally obliterated."  +
"Überprägt auf einen Denar des C. Vibius Pansa (Cr. 342) aus dem Jahr 90 v. Chr. (Vs. Rest der Inschrift PANSA)."  +
"Überprägungsspuren im Av. (?), "  +
Overstruck with traces of a border of dots  +
This coin is a so-called flip-over double strike, meaning that the flan was not removed between two strikes but flipped over, which resulted in traces of the reverse legend (ΠΑΤΡ) being visible on Antiochos' chin (FdC: not – different engravings)  +
Appears to be overstruck on a Syracusan litra, Athena/Hippocamp (Calciati 1986, p. 87, n° 42), with a trace of the hippocamp's tail visible on the pileus. Often attributed to Skylletium in Bruttium on the basis of the Skylla on the reverse, this type has been found in excavations in Locri and in north-central Sicily, and as is the case with this coin, is often times overstruck on a Syracusan litra  +