The Carol F. Ross Collection of Ancient Roman Coins

The Carol F. Ross Collection of Ancient Roman Coins

Sale type: Live auction

 

Auction Thurs, June 12 at 10am

EXHIBITION

Sat, June 7, Noon – 5pm
Sun, June 8, Noon – 5pm
Mon, June 9, Noon – 5pm


LOCATION

Doyle New York
175 East 87th Street
New York, NY 10128

BIDDING SERVICES

Abigail Burner
212-427-4141, ext 242
Fax: 212-427-7526
Bids@Doyle.com

Learn how to bid

SPECIALISTS

Chris Bulfinch
212-427-4141, ext 273
Coins@Doyle.com

MEDIA CONTACT

Louis LeB. Webre
212-427-4141, ext 232
Louis.Webre@Doyle.com

  • Auction of The Carol F. Ross Collection of Ancient Roman Coins on Thursday, June 12, 2025 at 10am

  • Featuring a Rare and Important Aureus of Marcus Junius Brutus, 42-42 BCE

  • Over 130 Ancient Coins Collected by a Noted New Haven Latin Teacher

NEW YORK, NY -- Doyle is honored to auction The Carol F. Ross Collection of Ancient Roman Coins on Thursday, June 12, 2025 at 10am. This remarkable collection comprises exceptionally attractive Roman Republican and Early Imperial coinage assembled by Carol F. Ross, a respected Latin teacher and former head of the Latin department at the Foote School in New Haven, Connecticut.

Carol began collecting ancient Roman coins in the mid-1980s, at the height of her teaching career. She believed deeply in the value of learning Latin—not only for its connection to Roman history, which she loved, but for the structure and foundation it provided for understanding other languages. Her love for ancient Roman history extended beyond the classroom, drawing her to Roman coins. She was especially drawn to coins of the Republican era, captivated by the historical turmoil of the time.

Carol acquired most of her coins through trusted dealers both in New York and during her travels to Italy, organizing her finds carefully in an album. Though she never publicly displayed her collection, paging through the album in quiet contemplation brought her deep personal satisfaction. The intellectual and historical value of the coins fueled her fascination. By the late 1990s, when she stepped back from full-time teaching, new coin acquisitions had slowed. She felt satisfied that her collection was now complete.

The Collection
The Carol F. Ross Collection of Ancient Roman Coins offers a rich diversity of Roman Republican and Imperial coinage, primarily denarii and aurei, two of the most ubiquitous denominations in ancient Rome. Her eye for quality is obvious looking at the collections’ finest examples, with the term “fleur de coin” aptly used in her notes on the best-looking coins. The collection was for Ross an intensely personal pursuit; though she and her husband Stephen, a noted finance professor, collected a wide variety of things, the coin collection was assembled by her. It surely reflects her fascination with the ancient world.

Covering a period of several centuries including some of the most famous episodes of ancient Roman history, the collection is studded by popular, rare types depicting scenes, symbols, and rulers recognizable to specialists and nonspecialists alike. Many of the designs are impressively rendered (especially considering the limitations of minting technology in the period) and dynamic, depicting battle scenes, flora and fauna, historical scenes, and deities ranging from Janus to Jupiter. Emperors and familiar names—Caesar, Brutus, Augustus, Marcus Aurelius, and Nero among them—appear on coinage of the civil war and Imperial period, arguably the most profound symbol of their sovereign authority after the end of the Republic.

Many of the coins are in a remarkable state of preservation, sporting sharp, even, well-centered strikes, attractive toning, and minimal handling marks.

Complementing the main body of Roman material are a few pieces from other ancient societies.



Carol F. Ross (1942-2025)
Born in Lexington, Massachusetts, Carol Frost Ross attended Lexington High School and continued her education at Wheaton College, majoring in Classics, a field that would become her life’s work. While at Wheaton, Carol also pursued her love of music alongside her academic pursuits. She later earned a Master’s degree in Classics from Bryn Mawr University, further deepening her expertise in the ancient world.

Carol’s teaching career began in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she taught Latin and Greek. It was also in Cambridge where she met her future husband, Stephen A. Ross. In 1977, the couple moved to New Haven, Connecticut, where Carol joined the faculty of the Foote School. Over the years, she became head of the Latin department and was admired for her warmth, intellectual rigor, and ability to inspire students. Even after her retirement from full-time teaching in 1996, she continued sharing her passion for classical languages through tutoring and teaching at Choate Rosemary Hall and Wilbur Cross High School.

Informed by her upbringing with two sisters and a strong mother, Carol believed deeply in the importance of advancing women’s rights, especially in the realm of health. “I became a strong feminist,” she once said. “It seemed natural to me that we should be striving as a country to do more to help women, particularly concerning health.” This conviction led her to Women’s Health Research at Yale (WHRY), where she joined the Advisory Council in 2009. She became Council Chair in 2011 and held that position for a decade, helping build trust with the community and advancing the organization’s mission of equity in health research.

In parallel with her academic and advocacy work, Carol maintained a strong presence in the arts community. She studied piano and recorder throughout her life, taking lessons at the Neighborhood Music School in New Haven, where served as President of the Board and later as Chair of the Board of the National Guild for Community Arts Education. In 2020, she was honored with the Guild’s National Service Award.

Carol found joy in nature as well, and her passion for gardening and conservation led her to the Garden Club of New Haven. As a past president and co-chair of the Club’s Centennial Committee, she worked to preserve and beautify the city’s green spaces, leaving a lasting impact on the community.

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