Hello,
They have been cleaned but some of them are still collectable.
Without color : roman nummus from the 4th century (I didn't check all of those as we only see one side, but they look very common with low values)
Blue : roman nummus too, I would have keep those and leave the other ones.
Orange : other roman coins (? / ? / an As of the Antonines dynasty / an antoninianus), I would have keep the last one and maybe the first two (depending on the emperors)
Yellow : byzantine coins in low conditions (two folis, an aspron, and a half folis)
Red : The most interesting part I think. I'm not completely sure about all of them (3rd and 5th lines are byzantine too), better pictures of both sides would be better for a full identification.
Here in Belgium, you will not be able to sell them in that worn state...
Roman coins are not rare, they are made by the millions.
A roman coin with value should be silver or gold.
$20 to $50 is to much for a serious collector of roman coins.
If you get $2/piece, you should be happy.
Non est totum quod splendet ut aurum
Rijkdom bestaat niet uit het hebben van veel bezittingen, maar in het hebben van weinig behoeften
Citeer: "PetrusAscanus"Here in Belgium, you will not be able to sell them in that worn state...
Roman coins are not rare, they are made by the millions.
A roman coin with value should be silver or gold.
$20 to $50 is to much for a serious collector of roman coins.
If you get $2/piece, you should be happy.
OP says he's in the US, in which case it's probably $3-4 a piece although with a big lot like this you wouldn't get that. Individually you could probably. Roman stuff is more expensive than in Europe.
Citeer: "PetrusAscanus"Here in Belgium, you will not be able to sell them in that worn state...
Roman coins are not rare, they are made by the millions.
A roman coin with value should be silver or gold.
$20 to $50 is to much for a serious collector of roman coins.
If you get $2/piece, you should be happy.
OP says he's in the US, in which case it's probably $3-4 a piece although with a big lot like this you wouldn't get that. Individually you could probably. Roman stuff is more expensive than in Europe.
That is why I told the situation here. And if you have a good metal detector, you just go out in the fields and come back with roman coins....
Asse is one of the major roman sites, untill about 400AD
Non est totum quod splendet ut aurum
Rijkdom bestaat niet uit het hebben van veel bezittingen, maar in het hebben van weinig behoeften
These are too damaged, badly cleaned and common. As a collector, I wouldn't buy them because they are unattractive and because I know that if you wanted to get rid of them, it would be hard to sell or trade them.
Nonetheless, they are also people who are looking for cheap coins even if in bad condition.
I kind of agree with the values said in the previous answers. Even in good condition, these coins are not that expensive.
Once I've bought for +- 60$ of Roman coins, and the seller gave me for free like 20 other Roman coins in that condition (I'm in Belgium, so it's easier to find them, as Petrus said).
I think there's one in the left that is cut, which could be a Greek from Macedonia but a better pic is needed. Another cut in the left seems to be a VRBS ROMA type in fair condition, which value would be around 15$ if the condition is what I think. Do not expect much from the others.