See full images — free registration
Continue with Google — it's free or register with email

Gold 50 Asses

Issuer Luca
Year 301 BC - 275 BC
Type Log in to see details
Value 50 Asses
Currency Log in to see details
Composition Log in to see details
Weight Log in to see details
Diameter Log in to see details
Thickness Log in to see details
Shape Log in to see details
Technique Log in to see details
Orientation Log in to see details
Engraver(s) Log in to see details
In circulation to Log in to see details
Reference(s) Log in to see details
Obverse description Male head in helmet facing right, rendered in archaic Italic style, enclosed within a plain inner field. The helmet appears crested and covers the nape of the neck. The entire design is contained within a pronounced beaded border running along the coin's periphery, a characteristic feature of early Lucanian gold coinage. The relief is bold yet somewhat crude, reflecting the early hammered technique employed by the Lucanian mint at Luca.
Obverse script Log in to see details
Obverse lettering Log in to see details
Reverse description Log in to see details
Reverse script Log in to see details
Reverse lettering Log in to see details
Edge Plain
Mint Log in to see details
Mintage Log in to see details
Additional information

Luca — modern Lucca in Tuscany — was an Etruscan center that produced coinage during a period of intensifying Roman pressure on the region. These gold fractions belong to a brief window of autonomous Etruscan monetary production before Roman political and economic absorption made independent civic coinage increasingly untenable. The denomination itself, reckoning in asses, reflects the degree to which Etruscan communities had already absorbed Roman weight standards into their own systems even while maintaining distinct civic identities.

Surviving examples are genuinely rare. Vecchi's corpus remains the primary reference precisely because the series is small enough to catalogue individually.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE