A spectacular ‘Ides of March’ aureus is one of three known examples. It is very genuine. To legally sell the coin, the dealer manufactured fake export documents and false previous ownership histories. In reality, the artifact had been looted from Greece.
 | The coin was previously unrecorded, and was submitted for grading. The coin remains in mint condition and has been described as “the undisputed masterpiece of ancient coinage.” The newly discovered example hit the auction block on October 29, 2020 at Roma Numismatics in London. The estimate was £500,000. The price when the hammer fell was $3.5m. |  |
There were two ‘Ides of March’ in gold. One was loaned to the British Museum. It sold for $2m in 2022. The second is in the Deutsche Bundesbank collection. About 100 silver examples are known to exist.