Well, if it is nice and bright and shiny, its obviously a fake. Otherwise, it is difficult for the average person to spot a fake one. This because an authentic Roman coin would more than likely have been used and may show wear by having its inscriptions worn or its shape distorted. It is best to have an expert appraise the coin
a Roman coin
Image of the Roman god Mars can be found at Coin Spot, Artistic Renderings, Roman Gods and at The History Channel website. For images of artistic pieces that have been created of Mars, Goddess Gift has a wide variety of figures and statues of Mars.
That is a very tough question to answer. There are several denominations of Roman bronze coins, so for that, I would need more information on the coin.
The value of this coin is based on the spot price of gold at time of sale. A $25.00 coin is one half ounce of gold so value is half of spot price.
See: Roman currency
There was no such thing as a 60 asses coin. The most valuable Roman coin in 211 BC was the denarius, which was worth 10 asses.
The value of a 1988 $50.00 one ounce gold coin goes up and down with the spot price of gold. As of today it's $1,115.10 per ounce so that's what the coin is worth
It was the Temblins.
2018
It is not known.
HI A spot A coin A nail I think lol