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Starting price: CHF 350
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 200
Current bid: CHF 200
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 150
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 150
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 400
Current bid: CHF 400
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 500
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 100
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 400
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 1'200
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 250
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 300
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 250
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Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 700
Current bid: CHF 850
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 250
Current bid: CHF 250
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 200
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 200
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 2'500
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Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 500
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Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 180
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Starting price: CHF 200
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Starting price: CHF 250
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 200
Current bid: CHF 200
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 200
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 250
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Starting price: CHF 400
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Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 250
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Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 250
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Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 400
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 300
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 250
Current bid: CHF 250
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 450
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 300
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 200
Current bid: CHF 200
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 200
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 150
Current bid: CHF 150
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 100
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Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 2'000
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Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
Lot # 292 - Time of the First Triumvirate. Tessera Nummularia dated 25 March 60 BC (Bone, 51 x 11 x 9 mm, 9.78 g). Inscription on all four sides: PHILARGVRVS / FVLVI / SP(ectavit) A(nte) D(iem) IIX K(alendas) APR(iles) / L AFR(anio) Q MET(ello) (Consulibus). Translation: Inspection carried out by Philargurus, slave of Fulvius, on the eighth day before the Kalends of April, in the year of the consulship of Lucius Afranius and Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer. L. Pedroni, G. Devoto, “Tessere da una collezione privata”, in "Archeologia Classica", Vol. 47, 1995, pp. 164-169, figg. 1a-4a (this specimen). Pierced at the top to be tied to a bag containing coins. Very Rare, with around 150 known examples worldwide - each bearing a different inscription.   From a British private collection, later passing into a Swiss collection in the early 2000s.   This is a "tessera nummularia", carved from bone and featuring a central perforation that allowed it to be tied directly to a bag of coins. Such objects were not intended for circulation but served as guarantees of the verification of coins by professional money-changers or assayers (nummularii) in ancient Rome. They often certified the weight, purity, and authenticity of a batch of currency. Tesserae like this represent a rare glimpse into the control mechanisms of Roman financial practices. Their utilitarian nature and material suggest daily use in commercial settings.   Philargyrus, a speaking name from Greek meaning “lover of silver”, functions here as both a personal and professional designation: Apuleius (Metamorphoses IV, 9) mentions a Theban money-changer named Chryseros, an etymological counterpart illustrating how monetary slaves and attendants were often identified by names evoking metals or wealth. His master, Fulvius, belonged to the homonymous gens Fulvia, one of the foremost Roman families involved in extensive financial operations, which could easily justify the employment of slaves for monetary control. According to Pliny the Elder (N.H. XXI, 6, 8), the first argentarius of Rome was a Fulvius, reportedly condemned during the Hannibalic era for displaying a wreath of roses on his counter - a gesture regarded as an act of ostentatious luxury. Another member of the same family, also a Fulvius, was responsible for constructing the celebrated Basilica Fulvia in the Roman Forum.
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Starting price: CHF 1'000
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 400
Current bid: CHF 400
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 200
Current bid: CHF 220
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
Lot # 295 - Late Republican Period. Circa 2nd - 1st centuries BC. Tessera Lusoria of the Fool. (Bone, 52 x 6 x 3 mm, 5.35 g). Rod-shaped, with a rectangular cross-section and one rounded end decorated with concentric circles, pierced by a tiny hole at the junction with the body of the plaque; at both ends, horizontally, two pairs of incised lines can be seen as decoration. Inscription on two sides: NUGATOR / I. Cf. C. Hülsen, "Miscellanea epigrafica, XXI. Tessere lusorie", in "Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Römische Abteilung", Vol. 11, 1896, pp. 227-257. L. Pedroni, G. Devoto, "Tessere da una collezione privata", in "Archeologia Classica", Vol. 47, 1995, pp. 178-179, figg. 5a-6a (this specimen). Cf. G. Baratta, "Un set di Tesserae Lusoriae da Corfinium", in "Anuari de filologia. Antiqua et mediaevalia", Vol. 8, 2018, pp. 134‐147. Excellent state of preservation, with no evident fractures or chips. Very Rare specimen.   From a British private collection, later passing into a Swiss collection in the early 2000s.   The Tesserae Lusoriae were small rectangular rods, mostly made of bone and more rarely of ivory, engraved on both sides: on one face appeared a name, an adjective, or a playful epithet, while the other bore a Roman numeral. The known numbering ranges from I to LX, but the evidence suggests an organized game, with pieces numbered from I to XXV, accompanied by special tokens bearing the numbers XXX and LX, and possibly also counters numbered between XXVI and XXIX. The numerical variations and the presence of distinctive pieces indicate a structured game, although its rules and purpose remain unknown and perhaps forever lost. In Spain and Italy, specimens have been found both as isolated pieces and as complete sets placed within rich burials (for instance, at Vaste – 17 tesserae; Perugia – 16; Syracuse – 8; Corfinio – 6), suggesting a circulation among the upper-middle classes. While the deposition of a single piece may have held an apotropaic or commemorative meaning - linked to the fortune of the deceased or an ancestor, thus serving as an amulet - the inclusion of an entire set within a tomb may point to more complex symbolism. In the case of the 16 tesserae discovered in Perugia, their association with glass hemispheres, a mirror, decorative fragments from a cista, and inscribed pebbles has led scholars to suggest that the deceased, likely an extraordinary individual, might have been a magician in life.   In short, one could almost say that these tesserae were either oracular tools used to divine the will of the gods, or the ancient precursors of Magic: The Gathering, created by Richard Garfield.
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Starting price: CHF 500
CHF
B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 1'000
Current bid: CHF 1'000
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 3'000
Current bid: CHF 3'000
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B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
Lot # 298 - Late Republican Period. Circa 2nd - 1st centuries BC. Tessera Lusoria of the Unlucky. (Bone, 53 x 6 x 3,5 mm, 7.18 g). Rod-shaped, with a rectangular cross-section and one rounded end decorated with concentric circles, pierced by a tiny hole at the junction with the body of the plaque; at both ends, horizontally, two pairs of incised lines can be seen as decoration. Inscription on two sides: INFELIX / IIII. Cf. C. Hülsen, "Miscellanea epigrafica, XXI. Tessere lusorie", in "Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Römische Abteilung", Vol. 11, 1896, pp. 227-257. L. Pedroni, G. Devoto, "Tessere da una collezione privata", in "Archeologia Classica", Vol. 47, 1995, pp. 178-179, figg. 5c-6c (this specimen). Cf. G. Baratta, "Un set di Tesserae Lusoriae da Corfinium", in "Anuari de filologia. Antiqua et mediaevalia", Vol. 8, 2018, pp. 134‐147. Excellent state of preservation, with no evident fractures or chips. Very Rare specimen.   From a British private collection, later passing into a Swiss collection in the early 2000s.   The Tesserae Lusoriae were small rectangular rods, mostly made of bone and more rarely of ivory, engraved on both sides: on one face appeared a name, an adjective, or a playful epithet, while the other bore a Roman numeral. The known numbering ranges from I to LX, but the evidence suggests an organized game, with pieces numbered from I to XXV, accompanied by special tokens bearing the numbers XXX and LX, and possibly also counters numbered between XXVI and XXIX. The numerical variations and the presence of distinctive pieces indicate a structured game, although its rules and purpose remain unknown and perhaps forever lost. In Spain and Italy, specimens have been found both as isolated pieces and as complete sets placed within rich burials (for instance, at Vaste – 17 tesserae; Perugia – 16; Syracuse – 8; Corfinio – 6), suggesting a circulation among the upper-middle classes. While the deposition of a single piece may have held an apotropaic or commemorative meaning - linked to the fortune of the deceased or an ancestor, thus serving as an amulet - the inclusion of an entire set within a tomb may point to more complex symbolism. In the case of the 16 tesserae discovered in Perugia, their association with glass hemispheres, a mirror, decorative fragments from a cista, and inscribed pebbles has led scholars to suggest that the deceased, likely an extraordinary individual, might have been a magician in life.   In short, one could almost say that these tesserae were either oracular tools used to divine the will of the gods, or the ancient precursors of Magic: The Gathering, created by Richard Garfield.
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Starting price: CHF 500
CHF
B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time
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Starting price: CHF 150
Current bid: CHF 220
CHF
B.P.: 19.00%
Closing on: 2026-04-09 13:30:00 Roma time

Results from 1 to 45 of 45