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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Roman Coins| > |Crisis & Decline| > |Philip I| > RY33024
Philip I the Arab, February 244 - End of September 249 A.D., Samosata, Commagene, Syria
|Philip| |I|, |Philip| |I| |the| |Arab,| |February| |244| |-| |End| |of| |September| |249| |A.D.,| |Samosata,| |Commagene,| |Syria|, Samosata was an ancient city on the right (west) bank of the Euphrates whose ruins existed at the modern city of Samsat, Adiyaman Province, Turkey until the site was flooded by the newly constructed Atatürk Dam. The founder of the city was Sames, a Satrap of Commagene who made it his capital. The city was sometimes called Antiochia in Commagene and served as the capital for the Hellenistic Kingdom of Commagene from c. 160 BC until it was surrendered to Rome in 72. A civil metropolis from the days of Emperor Hadrian, Samosata was the home of the Legio VI Ferrata and later Legio XVI Flavia Firma, and the terminus of several military roads. Seven Christian martyrs were crucified in 297 in Samosata for refusing to perform a pagan rite in celebration of the victory of Maximian over the Sassanids. It was at Samosata that Julian II had ships made in his expedition against Sapor, and it was a natural crossing-place in the struggle between Heraclius and Chosroes in the 7th century.
RY33024. Bronze provincial sestertius, BMC Galatia p. 122, 44 ff., F, Samosata mint, weight 14.421g, maximum diameter 31.2mm, die axis 180o, obverse AYTOK K M IOYΛI ΦIΛIΠΠOC CEB, laureate, draped, and cuirassed bust right; reverse ΦΛ CAMOCATEWN MHTPOΠ KOM, city-goddess seated left on rocks, grain in right, eagle on right arm, Pegasos running right at her feet; SOLD











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