Coins (217 Subjects)
Ancient coins from Arcadia. Obv. Athena.
Ancient coin of Salamis. Obv. Ajax son of Telamon, king of Salamis.
Ancient coin of Macedonia.
Ancient coins. Top: Coin from Kerch (anc. Panticapaion), in Taurica. Middle: Coin of Kos. Bottom: Coin from Miletus.
Ancient coins of Argos.
Coins from Laconia, which according to the author date from antiquity. Based on their typology, however, it is evident that they come from a later period than the authors claim. The figure on the coin at the right is probably Lysandros, the General of Sparta (fifth century BCE).
Ancient coins of Corfu.
Ancient coins of Corfu.
Roman coins of Corfu.
Roman coins of Corfu.
Coins and inscription from Corfu.
1. Ancient marble panel with inscription from the Temple of Artemis. After the Temple was demolished, this panel served as the altar stone at the church of Agios Dimitrios in Melinado, Zakynthos, which is today in ruins. 2. Ancient coins of Zakynthos and Cythera.
Colossal statue of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, which is found today in the Archeological Museum of Venice. Coins of the era of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa.
Byzantine coins.
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. In the foreground, a Turk charges the pilgrims their entrance to the church.
Coins from Crimea, Ottoman era.
Ancient coins from Crimea.
Ancient tomb outside the city of Rhodes.
A coin of emperor Antoninus Pius. A coin of emperor Germanicus. The drawings were probably based on descriptions of ancient coins rather than made from acctual items.
Roman coin of Emperor Otho. Ancient coin from Lesbos island. Ancient coins from Tinos island.
Ancient coins from Zakynthos (1), Abydos (2), Izmir (3), Thyateira (4), Roman coins of emperors Commodus and Caracalla from Patras (5,6), coins from Delphi (7) and Sicyon (8).
Ancient coins from Thyateira (1), Izmir (2), Ephesus (3), Pergamon (4), Laodicea (5), Philadelphia (6), Sardes (7) and Magnesia (8).
Ancient coins from Phocaea (1, 2), Sardes (3, 4), and possibly Izmir (5, 6).
Ancient coins from Tmolus (1), Izmir and Hierapolis (2), Milas (3, 4), coin of emperor Gallienus from Metropolis in Ionia (5), Colophon (6), coin of emperor Caracalla from Lebedus and Nicaea (7, 8).
Ancient Greek and Byzantine coins of Thessaloniki.
Roman coin from Thessaloniki.
Antiquities from Ancient Pella.
Roman coins of Macedonia.
Hellenistic coins bearing portrait heads of Alexander the Great.
Ancient Greek (Macedonian) and Roman coins from Philippoi. Pedestal bearing Roman inscription from Philippoi.