Counterfeiting is as old as coinage itself. There is an almost continuous
series from the hardly detectable forgeries to the very crude "barbarous"
imitations, from the full-weight and "good silver" pieces to the undersized and
copper fakes. There are also many fourrees (silver plated pieces with a bronze
core). One can hypothesize that some of these pieces came from the legal mints
but the majority of the counterfeit coins must have been produced in various
places, theoretically everywhere where these coins were respected.
All kinds of unofficial issues of the Apolloniate and Dyrrhachian coins will be
dealt with in this page. Call again from time to time to see new additions.
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The exact terminology and legal aspects of counterfeiting can be studied from
other web sites but some terms are described here as I use them.
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From the hardly noticeable to the bizarre
Let's see examples for the gradual style degradation. The most common examples
come from the late, increased drachm production phase. The following table
shows the main features of the most frequently copied Dyrrhachian emissions for
easier detection of the decline from these on the imitations. 'Year' in the
table is the year of issue of the particular coin type calculated backwards
from the end of production (last emission = year -1).
Year | Obv. name | Rev. name | Ceka # | Symbol above name | Left / Right | Exergue | Reverse legend |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-13 | Ktetos | Damenos | 276 | - | - / ear of corn | grapes | DYR DA ME NOS |
Xenon | 357 | ||||||
-12 | Xenon | Pyrba-club | 360 | Eagle | - / - | - | DYR PYR BA club |
-11 | Xenon | Haropinou | 363 | Eagle on sceptre | - / quiver | - | DYR HARO PI NOU |
-10 | Xenon | Filodamou | 362 | Eagle | - / - | hound | DYR FILO DA MOU |
-9 | Xenon | Fillia | 361 | Caps of Dioscuri | ear of corn / torch | - | DYR FIL LI A |
-8 | Xenon | Agathionos | 353 | Eagle with flapping wings | - / - | rudder | DYR AGA THIO NOS |
Meniskos | 316 | ||||||
-7 | Meniskos | Arhippou | 318 | - | - / - | rudder | DYR AR HIP POU |
-6 | Meniskos | Filota | 331 | - | - / torch | hound | DYR FI LO TA |
-5 | Meniskos | Kallonos | 322 | Flying Nike with wreath | - / - | thunderbolt | DYR KAL LO NOS |
-4 | Meniskos | Dionysiou | 320 | Bird | - / - | - | DYR DIO NY SIOU |
-3 | Meniskos | Lykiskou | 325 | - | - / female statue | - | DYR LY KIS KOU |
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A die-linked chain of hybrid imitations
This series of die-linked hybrid imitations of Dyrrhachian drachms reflects the
counterfeiting activity of a prosperous workshop of so far unknown location
during the final period of drachm minting. The coins surfaced in different
hoards; can be found in many museums, and turn up in trade from time to time.
The picture below shows the specimens of this series from my collection. The
two coins in the upper part are the prototype issues. The copy of the
Xenon-Pyrba-club (XPA-A) shows style degradation on the obverse and the name on
the reverse became nonsense, PYO-DTA. Only the obverse was copied of the
Ktetos-Damenos coin on the right; the reverse of this imitation came from the
same die that was used for the Xenon-Pyodta-club (TA-A). The obverse was copied
again with further style degradation but the reverse was still produced with
the same die (TB-A).
The whole series includes a further issue (Xenon-Haropinou, Ceka 363) and contains more die varieties. The prototypes were from consecutive years:
Emission | Ceka # | Class | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Ktetos-Damenos | 276 | Dyr-4 | -13 |
Xenon-Pyrba | 360 | Dyr-5 | -12 |
Xenon-Haropinou | 363 | Dyr-5 | -11 |
The next table shows the details of twelve imitation pieces of the series. Some
of the coins have not been available for closer examination. Three different
obverse varieties
were found in this material:
XP
is the imitation of the obverse of Xenon-Pyrba,
XH
of Xenon-Haropinou, and
T
of Ktetos-Damenos; this is an error legend. Tetos was copied instead of the
original Ktetos: either the first letter was off-flan as on my piece or the
prototype was already an imitation, Tetos-Damenos, BMC 58. I could identify
altogether four different obverse dies: XPA, XHA, TA, and TB.
There is only one
reverse type
: DYR-PYO-DTA-club. Two different dies were distinguishable: A and B.
There are several die-links among these pieces: either the obverse or the
reverse is die equivalent with another piece. The follow-up of style
degradation helps identify the chronological sequence of the dies. Coins marked
with the asterisk (#1, 4, 6) are illustrated in the picture above.
No. | Obv. die | Rev. die | Origin | Disposition | Weight | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1* |
XPA |
A |
? Baldwin's Auct.17 #19, 1998 | GP collection |
3.66 |
- |
2 |
XHA |
A |
Zaklopaca hoard 1928 | National Museum Belgrade |
? |
4, Pl. VI #1 |
3 |
XH? |
B |
Bobaia hoard 1962 | Museum of Transylvania Cluj |
3.65 |
5, #181 |
4* |
TA |
A |
? Spink 1988 | GP collection |
3.28 |
1 |
5 |
TB |
A |
? | HNM Coin Cabinet Budapest |
3.18 |
2, #29 |
6* |
TB |
A |
? CNG 2001 | GP collection |
3.38 |
- |
7 |
TB |
A |
Dolj hoard, 19th c. | Museum of History Bucharest |
3.38 |
3, #161 |
8 |
TB |
A |
Zaklopaca hoard 1928 | National Museum Belgrade |
? |
4, Pl. VI #2 |
9 |
TB |
B |
Bobaia hoard 1962 | Museum of Transylvania Cluj |
3.72 |
5, #183 |
10 |
Tnon-A |
? |
? | Archaeological Museum Istanbul |
3.07 |
- |
11 |
T? |
? |
? | Private collection Budapest |
? |
- |
12 |
T? |
? |
? | eBay auction March, 2002 |
? |
- |
Further observations
The metal composition of the imitations is not known but they look 'alright';
some coins (#1, 3, 9) have even higher weight than the average of the official
issues.
An interesting feature here is the multiple appearance of the same reverse die
with several obverses; and the number of obverse dies exceeds the number of
reverse dies. Usually the opposite is found. The reverse of coins was produced
by the hand-held upper (punch) die that wore off quickly, the more elaborate
and therefore more precious obverse die lasted longer for it was fixed in the
anvil. Maybe this workshop used different practices or the dies of the obverses
were softer and had to be replaced more frequently. A small line at the ear of
corn on coin #3 may suggest a die crack of obverse die TA that broke soon and
was replaced by TB?
Summary
The growing number of recorded coins in this die-linked hybrid imitation series
and the occurrence of such pieces in three different hoards far from each other
(Zaklopaca is in Serbia; Bobaia is in the Transylvanian, Dolj in the Wallachian
region of Rumania) suggest a well equipped and active mint, which produced
deceiving imitations. The exact place of this workshop cannot be located yet in
the wide area where these coins were popular in the first decades of the 1st
century BC.
References