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Dardanian Mines Issue

322, Lot: 531. Estimate $200.
Sold for $310. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

Trajan. AD 98-117. Æ Quadrans (18mm, 3.34 g, 6h). Dardanian mines issue. Rome(?) mint. Struck circa AD 99-102. Laureate head right, slight drapery / DARDANICI, female figure standing left, holding branch. RIC II 704 corr. (holding ‘grain ears’) var. (without drapery); Woytek 609b; Simic & Vasic 4. VF, green patina with patches of dark brown on the reverse, some roughness. Scarce.


Under Trajan and Hadrian several series of bronze quadrantes were struck in the name of the imperial mines in Noricum, Dalmatia, Pannonia and Moesia (Dardania). These operations supplied metal for the mint at Rome, and perhaps were the sites of workshops to produce coinage for local circulation or as donatives. Others theorize that these pieces were struck at Rome itself, and served some unidentified function, much as the contemporary "nome" coinage struck at Alexandria in Egypt. Whatever the circumstances, these pieces saw limited use, and, except for one rare type struck by Marcus Aurelius, were not issued at any other period. The region of mining activity named on the reverse is Dardania, a district of Moesia Superior to the north of the Roman colony of Scupi. Mattingly (in BMCRE p. cix, note 1) mentions that "Trajan's 'Dardanici' coins belong to the silver mines of Kopaonik and Pristina in Serbia and old Serbia."