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This information was automatically generated from data provided by MOA: University of British Columbia. It has been standardized to aid in finding and grouping information within the RRN. Accuracy and meaning should be verified from the Data Source tab.

Description

Byzantine coin from ‘Anonymous Folles’ Period, 970-1092. Obverse: bust of Christ, facing front, with a short beard; he has a nimbus cruciger around his head, which is a cross within a halo; he wears a pallium, which is a woolen cloak; he holds the Book of Gospels in front of him, which is decorated with dots; to left, inscription says ‘I’; there is a second inscription to the left, which begins with a cross and says ‘E’; to right, ‘V’. Reverse: large cross, resting on three steps; there is also an inscription of three lines which intersects with the cross; it says ‘ISXS/bASILE/bASILE’. The inscription on the reverse in translation says ‘Jesus Christ, King of Kings’.

History Of Use

"Follis" (denomination); Sear# 1823. The Sear catalogue says that this coin most likely belonged to Romanus III.

Narrative

The ‘Anonymous Folles’ are a group of coins spanning just over a century. They often have a depiction of Christ in place of any images or inscriptions which would indicate the emperor to whose reign they belong, thus rendering them anonymous.

Item History

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