Welcome. I started this website in early 2002. I had discovered I could purchase “uncleaned” Roman coins a year or two prior to that. This was in the period after the fall of the Iron Curtain, and the supply of coins was huge and the quality was surprisingly good. I would often receive groups of coins that need nothing more than light brushing. I found a denarius in one of my first lots. That was the final “hook” that addicted me to this hobby. I still clean coins on occasion. Instead of uncleaned coins, I buy coins that look like they would improve from a cleaning. They cost more, but they are more fun to clean and generally the results are good everytime.

This hobby is amazing in so many ways. As my knowledge grows, I realize how little I know, and that fact requires more learning. I wanted a way to share my coins online, so I am learning what I need to learn to do that. I need decent pictures of my coins, so I’m learning that. To attribute coins, I need to learn how to read Latin, and Greek. To enjoy my coins in their historical context, I need to learn some history. This hobby hooked me in so many interesting ways.

These coins are the constant. My sons were learning to walk and talk when I started this website, now they are grown men building their futures. I uploaded the first pages of this website on dialup internet. Since then, I have experience 24 years of life, with all the changes, gains, losses, comings and goings that entails.

These coins have been around for all of that. Since they were made, kingdoms and countries have come and gone. My time with these coin is tiny in comparison. They will be here when I have gone. Maybe that’s the thing I enjoy the most about them, the perspective. As I typed this, I have a Ptolemy Coin on my desk. How did a coin from 163 B.C. Egypt make it here? That journey is amazing to me. I have come to learn that the coins here are not Kevin’s Coins, they just stopped off here with me for a bit on their journey. I’m all the better for it.

About My Collection. The majority of the Roman coins are from uncleaned lots. As a result, some of the coins are not pretty, at least not in the conventional sense. I can find something to admire in every coin. The detail of an eye, the folds of a robe, lettering that is at once both familiar and strange. Every coin, even the unattributable ones have something to offer me. It’s still fascinates me to hold a coin, no matter the condition, that is 1500+ years old. Who made it, who earned it and how? What did they spend it on? Its brief trip back in time all in the palm of my hand. In this virtual collection I will post any coin I can attribute to an Emperor.

I’m not a very disciplined collector. Once it was time to expand from the late Roman coins found in uncleaned lots, I (like most new collectors I would wager) tried to get one coin of every Roman Emperor that minted one. Along the way I found I was fascinated by the Flavians, became interested in Roman Egypt coins, and recently Ptolemaic coinage has caught my interest. I also acquired coins just because I liked the way they looked. I know conventional wisdom is to focus, but I find I’m happier visiting the various niches in time, staying for a while and moving on to the next one.

You will find errors. I’m correcting the mistakes as I find them. I’m sure experts with a keener eye, and more experience will find some attribution errors, or can help complete an attribution. If you can help, please e-mail me. There are also e-mail links on every page of the collection to make reporting errors easier. I am a work in progress who can benefit from the knowledge of others. I have tried to organize these pages as logically as possible. Some areas are "lumped" together, simply because they are out of my focus, and there aren't many coins to show. Coins in the Roman Imperial section are grouped by emperor, and then each emperors page is organized by RIC number. Please enjoy your visit! (Updated May 2026)

Random Coins From My Collection

  • Antoninianus of Probus RIC 771

    Billon Antoninianus (22mm 3.60g) Struck 276-282 A.D. Siscia

    Obv: IMP C M AVR PROBVS P F AVG Radiate helmeted and cuirassed bust left holding spear and sheild

    Rev: PAX AVGVSTI Pax standing left, holding branch and transverse spear V in rt field XXI in exergue

    RIC Viii 711 bust g

  • Silver Denarius (18mm, 3.46g) Struck AD 161-162 Rome

    Obv:IMP L AVREL VERVS AVG Barehead right

    Obv: PROV DEOR TR P II COS II Providentia holding globe and cornucopiae

    RIC IIII 482

  • City Commemorative Reduced Centenionalus RIC 371 Rome

    Billon Reduced Centenionalis  (16mm, 2.53g) Struck AD 333-335 Rome

    Obv; CONSTANTINOPLIS Helmeted bust left, reversed spear

    Rev: No inscription Victory standing left, foot on prow with scepter and leaning on sheild in r wrth e exergue

    RIC VII 371

  • Crispus Centenionalus RIC 181 Siscia

    Billon Centenionalis (19mm 2.76g) Struck AD 321-324  Siscia

    Obv: IVL CRISPVS NOB C Laureate bust right

    Rev: CAESARVM NOSTRORVM VOT X wreath with VOT X in center esis sun in exergue

    RIC VII 181

  • Constans Reduced Centenionalis RIC 192 Siscia

    Billon Reduced Centenionalis  (15mm 1.43g) Struck 347-348 A.D. Siscia

    Obv: CONSTANS P F AVG Diad., draped. & cuirassed bust right

    Rev: VICTORIAE DD AVGG Q NN Victories standing facing each other holding wreath and palm ASIS in exergue hr in mid field

    RIC VIII192

  • Barbarous Coin 1

    AE 4  16mm 2.18g

    Obv: Helmeted, draped, and cuirassed bust right

    Rev: Two victories placing sheild on altar

  • Silver Denarius Rome RIC 166

    Silver Denarius (19mm 3.01g) Struck AD 200-201

    Obv: SEVERVS AVG PART MAX Laureate bust right

    Rev: PROVID AVGG Providentia standing left . holding wand over globe and a scepter

    RIC IV i 166

  • Valentinian I Bronze Centenionalis RIC 7a Siscia

    Bronze Centenionalis (19mm, 1.99g) Struck AD 365-367 Siscia

    Obv: D N VALENTINIANVS P F AVG Pearl diademed, draped, and cuirassed bust right

    Rev SECVTITAS REIPVBLICAE Victory advancing left holding wreath and palm starA in left field ASISC in exergue

    RIC IX 7a type vii Sear 19506

  • Maximian Billon Tetradrachm (19mm, 7.33g)
    Alexandrian, Egypt AD 292-293

    Obv: MAΞIMIANOC CEB Laureate bust right

    Rev: LH (year 8) Elpis standing left holding a flower in her right hand, lifting the hem of her skirt with her left hand

    Emmett 4114

  •  Bronze As Countermarked Roman Coin

    AE As of Claudius (28mm, 10.98g)

    Obv: NCAPR countermark usually attributed to Nero, but could possibly be Nerva. NCAPR means either "Nero Caesar Augustus Probavit" which means roughly "by the approval of Nero Claudius Avguvstvs" The other possibility is "Nero Ceasar Augustus Populi Romani" or...

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