TURKISH MUSEUM EXHIBITS ANCIENT COINS
The E-Sylum (8/25/2013)
Book Content
Providing a treasure trove of artifacts for numismatists, an archaeology museum in Aydýn is showing off a large collection of silver coins dating back to between 270 and 40 B.C.
The coins include the visages of empresses and emperors, revealing history from more than 2,000 years ago.
Aydýn Culture and Tourism official Nuri Aktakka said the collections dated from the Roman era and shed light on the culture of the day.
âThis coin collection has been excavated from works at Nazilli Kýzýldere. They belong to an emperorsâ collection from 270 to 40 B.C. We know that these emperors ruled the city and that they created coins for themselves,â he said.
The coins also signify an important part of the culture of coin collection, as well as the use of tin in the era, according to Aktakka.
âThe historical collection displays the coins by emperors such as Hadrian, Commodus, Gordian and Marcus Aurelius, and also the empresses Crispina and Faustina I and II,â he said, adding that Emperor Hadrian was born Publius Aelius Hadrianus to an ethnically Italian family.
The museum also gives information on how the coins were crafted and how people worked on the coins to engrave pictures on them.

To read the complete article, see: Coins displayed at museum reveals Aydýnâs ancient past of Roman era (www.hurriyetdailynews.com/coins-displayed-at-museum-reveals-aydins-ancient-past-of-roman-era.aspx?pageID=238&nID=52599&NewsCatID=375)