G'day! Sign in or register
GO TO INDEX OF CATALOGUE
Search Result for "7092"
LotDescriptionReserveEstimateYour Bid
13941
Seleucid Coins: A Comprehensive Catalogue, Part I: Seleucus I through Antiochus III, Volume II: Appendices, Indices and Plates. Arthur Houghton and Catharine Lorber, metrological tables by Brian Kritt. New York, American Numismatic Society in association with Classical Numismatic Group, 2002. Large 4to, teal cloth with gilt spine lettering, in the pictorial dust jacket, maroon endpapers. ISBN 0-9709268-4-7. The essential companion volume to Part I, bringing together the full working apparatus, substantial appendices (including hoards, mint administration and metrology), detailed indices for quick navigation by mint, control marks, monograms, legends and types, and an extensive sequence of plates illustrating both precious-metal and bronze issues across the Seleucid world, invaluable for attribution and close comparison. Virtually unread, with a fresh, glossy jacket showing only the lightest handling, clean boards, and crisp pages throughout.
  A$100
(US$71)
(€61)
(£54)
  A$250
(US$178)
(€153)
(£135)
A$
14051
Indo-Scythian Coins and History, Volume II: The Illustrated Catalogue of Indo-Scythian and Indo-Parthian Coins. R.C. Senior. Lancaster, PA and London, Classical Numismatic Group, 2001, first edition. Paperback, 215 pages. ISBN 0-9636738-9-0 (Vol. II); 0-9709268-1-2 (three-volume set). The picture-atlas of the series, bringing together virtually every Indo-Scythian and Indo-Parthian type recorded by the author at publication, with the great majority of plates scanned directly from coins for consistent, easy comparison, supplemented by images from major museum and private holdings and important hoards. Arranged by rulers and issues, it is built for attribution, with systematic coverage of the Maues coinage, the Azilises and Azes series, the Vonones and Spalirises families, Apraccharajas and Aspavarma, the wider ?Rajas and Satraps? issues, Parthian-related types and countermarks, Gondophares and successors across key regions, and the Southern Satraps and related dynasties, all supported by practical tools including hoard summaries, monogram lists, glossary, appendices, and a full bibliography. A true bench reference for identification and cataloguing in a field where types, controls, and monograms can be notoriously complex. As new, with bright covers and clean pages throughout.
  A$75
(US$53)
(€46)
(£41)
  A$150
(US$107)
(€92)
(£81)
A$
14053
Indo-Scythian Coins and History, Volume III: The ?Easy Finder? Catalogue of Types, Monograms and Letters Appearing on Indo-Scythian and Indo-Parthian Coins. R.C. Senior. Lancaster, PA and London, Classical Numismatic Group, 2001, first edition. Paperback. ISBN 0-9709268-0-4 (Vol. III); 0-9709268-1-2 (three-volume set). The practical desk companion to the series, designed for fast attribution by reducing the material into clear line drawings, tables, and letterforms that let you match types, monograms, and control marks at a glance. Arranged ruler-by-ruler and by diagnostic devices, it runs from Maues and Azilises through Azes and related families, the Rajas and Satraps, countermarked and ?Parthian? issues, Gondophares and later Indo-Parthians, the Paratarajas, and the Western Satrap line, with the key reference charts at the end bringing together monograms and parallel alphabets for Greek, Kharosthi, Brahmi numerals, and Pahlavi. A genuinely useful benchbook that speeds up identification and helps keep attributions consistent across a notoriously complex series. As new, with bright covers and clean pages throughout.
  A$75
(US$53)
(€46)
(£41)
  A$150
(US$107)
(€92)
(£81)
A$
14054
Indo-Scythian Coins and History, Volume IV Supplement: Additional Coins and Hoards; The Sequences of Indo-Greek and Indo-Scythian Kings. R.C. Senior. Lancaster, PA and London, Classical Numismatic Group, 2006, first edition. Paperback. ISBN 0-9709268-6-3. The long-awaited companion to Senior?s three-volume set (2001), extending and correcting the series with newly recorded varieties, additional rulers and types, and a major hoard dossier that refines the Indo-Greek and Indo-Scythian king sequences. The introduction tackles the main chronological and attribution questions, including successions, eras, overstrikes, monograms, weight standards, and hoard evidence, drawing on the steady flow of post-2000 discoveries and key epigraphic advances. The main section presents a supplementary catalogue of newly documented coins alongside a substantial register of hoards (including many of the standard named groups), supported by practical tables for comparisons, suggested dates, royal titles, dynastic types, and monogram sequences keyed to the earlier volumes. Compiled from first-hand records and the author?s own photographic material, it preserves primary data often scattered across sales and journals and remains a core working reference for cataloguers and advanced collectors. As new, with bright covers and clean pages throughout.
  A$75
(US$53)
(€46)
(£41)
  A$150
(US$107)
(€92)
(£81)
A$