Sundo Cards & Collectables
  • Home
  • Guides
    • Bones & Osteology
    • Books & Music
    • Comic Books
    • Coins & Paper Money
    • Games & Memorabilia
    • Models & Miniatures
    • Stamps & Philately
    • Toys & Figurines
    • Trading Cards & TCG
  • Forum
  • Articles
  • About
  • Contact
Select Page

Coins & Paper Money

  • Guide to Determining The Value of a Coin
  • What Makes a Coin Valuable?
  • Guide to Frequently Found Coins
  • How to Read Ancient Coins
  • Guide to Types of Ancient Coins
  • Writing Systems and Numismatics
  • Guide to Coin Errors
  • Guide to Coin Grading
  • Guide to Cleaning Coins
  • Circulated vs Uncirculated Coins Guide
  • Impact of the Greek Language & Script on Old World Coinage
  • List of U.S. & Canadian Coins to Look For in Change
  • The History of Australian Coins
  • List of Coin Valuers in Australia
  • List of Australian Coin Distributors
  • A Ranking of Individual Auction Houses on Biddr
  • Guide to Large and Small Date Lincoln Cents
  • List of Currency Collecting Reddit Subs
  • Coin Collecting Glossary of Common Terms
  • Paper Money & Bills Collecting Glossary of Common Terms

Comics & Omnibus

  • A Simple Guide To Start Reading Comics
  • Comic Book Collecting Common Terms Glossary
  • Comic Book Collecting FAQ
  • Guide to Comic Book Storage & Preservation
  • Comic Book Character First Appearances
  • Beginner’s Guide to Omnibus Collecting
  • Comic Book Recommended Reading List
  • The Complete Marvel Reading Order Guide
  • List of Comic Book Reddit Subs

Stamps & Philately

  • How Much are My Stamps Worth?
  • Beginner’s Guide to Stamp Collecting
  • Guide to Basic Stamp Identification
  • Guide to Commonly Mis-identified Stamps
  • How to Remove Stamps from Envelopes
  • List of Stamp Collecting Reddit Subs
  • Stamp Collecting Common Terms Glossary

Trading Cards & TCG

  • Found or Inherited Bulk Trading Cards? Guide to Value & Profit
  • The Complete Visual Image Guide to Parallels, Refractors, Foil & Holographic Trading Cards
  • The Complete Trading Cards FAQ
  • Determine the Value of your Trading Cards
  • Trading Cards: Should I Hold or Sell?
  • How to Pre-Assess Your Trading Cards for PSA Grading
  • Guide to Getting Trading Cards Graded
  • Should I Get This Trading Card Graded?
  • Complete Guide to Pokemon Card Types
  • Beginner’s Guide to Pokemon Card Grading
  • How To Evaluate Your Pokemon TCG Trading Cards
  • Guide to Identifying Fake Pokemon Cards
  • An In-Depth Guide to Pokémon Card Collecting
  • Guide to Collecting Pokemon TCG on a Budget
  • Guide to PSA Card Grading
  • Guide to Trading Card Storage & Protection
  • A Complete Guide to UFC & MMA Cards
  • A Guide to Common Terms for Yu-Gi-Oh!
  • An Introduction & Beginner’s Guide to Yu-Gi-Oh!
  • A List of Yu-Gi-Oh! Staple Cards
  • A List of Yu-Gi-Oh! Booster Packs
  • A Guide to Rare Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards
  • Guide to Centering on Trading Cards
  • Guide to Identifying Magic The Gathering (MTG) Cards
  • Guide to Print Lines on Trading Cards
  • Guide to Verifying Rare Trading Cards
  • Beginner’s Guide to Collecting Basketball Cards
  • Beginner’s Guide to One Piece TCG
  • Types of Trading Card Genres
  • Trading Card Collecting Common Terms Glossary

Models & Miniatures

  • List of Online Shops & Model Kit Companies
  • The Complete Guide to Painting Miniatures
  • Beginner’s Guide to Warhammer40k
  • Resources for Painting Miniatures
  • List of Mini Painting YouTube Channels
  • List of Recommended Tools for Working with Models
  • Guide to Model Paint
  • Guide to Getting Started in Warhammer40k
  • List of Model Brands
  • Guide to Models with Clear Parts
  • Guide to Airbrushing Models
  • Guide to Using Metal Foil for Bare Metal Effects
  • List of Model Building Reddit Subs
  • Model Building & Collecting Common Terms Glossary
  • Minipainting Common Terms Glossary

Games & Memorabilia

  • Beginner’s Guide to Video Game Collecting
  • Nintendo Switch Collecting Guide v1.0
  • Beginners Guide to Star Wars The Black Series
  • GameCube Beginners Guide
  • Guide to Collecting Military Memorabilia / Militaria
  • Game Collecting Common Terms Glossary
  • Memorabilia Collecting Common Terms Glossary
  • Board Games Common Terms Glossary

Toys & Figurines

  • Toys & Figurines Common Terms Glossary
  • Beginners Guide to Toy Collecting
  • Guide to Vintage Toy Appraisal and Sales
  • Spider-Man Action Figure Buying Guide
  • Guide to Vintage Star Wars Weapons
  • Guide To Neon Genesis Evangelion Figurines
  • Guide to Doctor Who Action Figures
  • The Complete Guide to Roblox Toys
  • Guide to Avoid Counterfeit Figurines on Amazon

Books & Music

  • Guide to Identifying the First Edition of a Book
  • What is a Rare Book? Or, How to Tell If You’re Suddenly Rich
  • Book Collecting FAQ
  • Identifying & Dealing with Mold & Foxing on Books
  • Beginner’s Guide to Collecting Rare Books
  • Guide to Identifying Arsenic on Books
  • Lord of the Rings LOTR ISBN Groupings for HarperCollins Based on Style
  • A Collector’s Guide to the Dune Book Series by Frank Herbert
  • Guide for New Vinyl Collectors
  • Beginner’s Guide to Vinyl Records
  • A Beginner’s Guide To Record Players
  • Guide to Collecting CDs
  • Beginner’s Guide to Collecting CDs
  • Guide to Collecting KPop
  • Book Collecting Common Terms Glossary

Bones & Osteology

  • Bone Collecting Common Terms Glossary
  • Guide to Processing a Carcass for Bone Collecting
  • The Bone Collecting Process: From Carcass to Bones
  • List of Comprehensive Resources for Bone Study
  • Atlas of Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy
View Categories
  • Home
  • Resources
  • Coins & Paper Money
  • Guide to Types of Ancient Coins

Guide to Types of Ancient Coins

Types of Greek coins #

Drachm #

Basic denomination, according to the Attic standard it weights around 4,3g. Equals six obols. Name means “a handful” or “a grasp” in Greek and is related to holding six rods of iron obols in one’s hand. Example of a drachm – minted in Lampsakos after the death of Alexander the Great. 4,21g, 17mm.

Obol #

initially an iron rod used as currency before coins were invented, later usually a silver coin of about 0,78g. Six obols equal one drachm. Example of an obol – Mysia, Lampsakos, 500-450 BC. 0,83g, 12mm.

Tetradrachm #

Equals 4 drachmae and weights around 17.2g. according to the Attic standard. In some places its weight was reduced to 12,6g (in case of cistophoric tetradrachms of Asia Minor) or 14,2g. (in Ptolemaic Egypt). Tetradrachms with reduced weight circulated only in the states which minted them and all people arriving there had to exchange their own money for locally minted one, since using foreign coins was forbidden.

Because foreign merchants had to exchange their heavier tetradrachms for lighter ones – the state was receiving a surplus of silver in such exchange. One of the most famous tetradrachms – Athenian tetradrachm, also called “an owl” (17,22g, 25mm)

Along with these three most famous denominations – there were also dekadrachms (10 drachmae), didrachms (2 drachmae), tetrobols (4 obols), triobols (3 obols, also known as hemidrachm – “half-drachm”), diobols (two obols), tetartemorions (1/4 obol), trihemitartemorions (one and a half tetartemorion), hemiobols (“half-obols” or 2 tetartemorions), tritartemorions (3 tetartemorions) and the smallest denomination of all – hemitetartemorion – half of tetartemorion weighting around 0.09g (if you own it – don’t drop it! 😉 ).

In addition to this, in the Greek world there were also “staters”, (equal to 2 drachmae, meaning “weight” and being the translation of semitic “shekel” which meant the same thing).

Famous examples are Corinthian Staters (8,63g, 21mm):

Staters of Aegina, following its own weight standard (12,19g, 18mm):

Greek states minted plenty of various bronze coins and a handful of gold ones as well. All major kingdoms (Ptolemaic, Seleukid, Macedonian) issued bronze coins necessary for basic day to day transactions. Also many local civic mints produced bronze coins, sometimes just to manifest their pride of having their own coinage with local symbols on them.

Types of Roman coins #

Thanks to few centuries of existence and conquering vast territory – Roman empire needed, produced and left us huge amounts of various coins.

In early republican times the official mint was located on the Capitolline hill, near the temple of Juno Moneta. Because of that “moneta” became the word meaning “mint” and “money”, and survived to this day in many languages, for example as English “money”, French “monnaie”, Italian and Polish “moneta” or Spanish “moneda”.

Here are some more commonly collected denominations:

Denarius #

standard silver coin, introduced around 211 BC and minted for about 450 years. Its name means “tenner”, because initially it was an equivalent of 10 asses. Its weight was decreed to be 1/84th of Roman pound – about 3,9g.

Later it was retariffed to be the quivalent of 16 asses, but the name stayed the same. Early denarii had limited variety when it comes to variants of obverses and reverses. Very common reverse types consist of Dioscuri or biga/quadriga.

In time aristocrats serving their terms as moneyers (officials overseeing the mint) gained the right to design obverses and reverses as they liked, resulting in very rich variety unprecedented in ancient world and often alluding to the history of their own ancestors and families.

For example moneyers of one family were often depicting elephants on coins they minted, because one of their ancestors defeated Carthaginian army many years earlier and captured more than 100 war elephants. Denarii were initially minted of almost pure silver (up to 98% purity) and maintained weight standard for more than two centuries.

During the early imperial era it was about the average daily wage. First debasement was conducted by Nero, who reduced the weight to 3,41g. (1/96th of a pound) and fineness to 93,5%. In the next decades fineness was slowly degrading up to the point when, during the reign of Aurelian, last denarii contained only 5% silver.

A lot of denarii:

Antoninianus #

New type of silver coin introduced by Caracalla in 215 CE. Name is not contemporary, we don’t know how ancient Romans called them. Officially a double denarius, it contained less silver than two denarii. Just like denarius, they were debased by later emperors to the point where they became basically bronze coins. Disappeared at the end of 3rd century. Antoniniani can be recognized by radiate crown shown on male busts and crescent below female busts. Few examples of antoniniani

Sestertius #

First issued around 211 BC, initially a small silver coin equal to 2,5 asses or 1/4 of a denarius. Minted sporadically during Roman republic. Reintroduced by Octavian August as large coin (around 26 grams) made of orichalcum (brass) and retariffed as 1/4 of denarius and 1/100 of aureus.

Disappeared at the end of the third century with Diocletian’s reform.

Dupondius #

Orichalcum (brass) coin worth 1/2 of a sestertius and two asses, weighting around 11-15 grams. Radiate crown, introduced to dupondii by Nero, signified it’s worth two asses, though some later dupondii did not have radiate busts, making it difficult to distinguish from asses (which had the similar size and weight).

Disappeared at the end of the third century.

As #

Basic Roman coin used in day-to-day transactions during early imperial era. Weighting around 9 – 12 grams and made of copper (unlike sestertii and dupondii which were made of brass). During Roman republic they had double-headed Janus on obverse and galley prow on reverse.

Disappeared at the end of the third century.

Semis #

Derived from the word “semi” meaning “half”. Initially a small brass coin valued as 1/2 as which fell out of use during the reign of Hadrian. In late Roman empire a good quality gold coin worth 1/2 of solidus.

Quadrans #

Smallest denomination, 1/4 of an as. Fell out of use in the middle of the second century CE. Entrance to public baths cost one quadrans.

Aureus #

Gold coin, at first minted very sporadically during the Roman republic. Issued in larger quantities by Julius Caesar, who ordered to mint 40 aurei out of Roman pound (making each aureus weight 8 grams). Octavian Augustus decreed that one aureus is worth 100 sestertii or 25 denarii. Its weight was slowly being reduced in the next 200 years, but the coins maintained very high fineness, reaching 98%.

During the crisis of the third century both weight and fineness dropped significantly. Weight dropped from 7,25g to 3,6g and fineness from 98% to, in some instances, 66%. During the reign of Gallienus no gold coin heavier than one gram was minted. Aurei permanently disappeared with the reform of Constantine I.

Quinarius #

Initially small silver coin minted during the republic with value of half denarius or five asses (just like the name of “denarius” was derived from “ten”, being initially the equivalent of 10 asses, the name of “quinarius” was derived from “five”).

This name is also used by modern numismatists to describe the smaller gold coin minted during the early imperial era, weighting 1/2 of aureus.

How to Read Ancient CoinsWriting Systems and Numismatics
Contents
  • Types of Greek coins
    • Drachm
    • Obol
    • Tetradrachm
  • Types of Roman coins
    • Denarius
    • Antoninianus
    • Sestertius
    • Dupondius
    • As
    • Semis
    • Quadrans
    • Aureus
    • Quinarius
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
© Sundo Cards & Collectables 2025 • Privacy