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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Roman Coins| > |Roman Republic| > |211-100 B.C.| > RR69085
Roman Republic, C. Minucius Augurinus, 135 B.C.
|211-100| |B.C.|, |Roman| |Republic,| |C.| |Minucius| |Augurinus,| |135| |B.C.|, In 135 B.C., the First Servile War began. After the Second Punic war, an over-abundance of slaves caused them to be ill-fed by their masters, and they soon began to provide for themselves by robbery. Several decades of increasing tension finally broke out into war. The rebel leader was Eunus, a slave whose master had hired him out as a magician for parties. Eunus would humorously tell his audiences that he was a prophet, that someday he would be king, the classes would be reversed, and aristocrats would killed or enslaved - except for those that tipped him for the show. During the revolt he did spare the lives of at least some aristocrats who had tipped him. The war lasted until 132 B.C. Eunus was captured, but he died before he could be punished. This was the first of three slave revolts against the Roman Republic; the last and the most famous was led by Spartacus.
RR69085. Bronze quadrans, Crawford 243/4, Sydenham 495b, BMCRR Rome 956, SRCV I 1148, VF, small flan, Rome mint, weight 4.810g, maximum diameter 19.5mm, die axis 90o, 135 B.C.; obverse head of Hercules right, in Nemean Lion's scalp headdress, three pellets behind; reverse prow of galley right, C•AVG above, three pellets before, ROMA below; scarce; SOLD










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