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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Roman Coins| > |Roman Provincial| > |Roman Arabia| > RY11655
Caracalla, 28 January 198 - 8 April 217 A.D., Petra, Arabia
|Roman| |Arabia|, |Caracalla,| |28| |January| |198| |-| |8| |April| |217| |A.D.,| |Petra,| |Arabia|,
Petra, the capital of the ancient Nabatean Kingdom, is a famous archaeological site in Jordan's southwestern desert. UNESCO describes Petra as "one of the most precious cultural properties of man's cultural heritage." The BBC selected Petra as one of "the 40 places you have to see before you die." Accessed via a narrow canyon called Al Siq, it contains tombs and temples carved into pink sandstone cliffs, earning its nickname, the "Rose City." Perhaps its most famous structure is 45m-high Al Khazneh, a temple with an ornate, Greek-style facade, and known as The Treasury. After the last Nabataean king, Rabbel II, died in 106 A.D., Trajan incorporated Nabataea into the Roman province Arabia Petraea. One of the latest known Nabataean language inscriptions, from 191 A.D., records "...This in the year 85 of the Eparchy [Roman Rule], in which Arabs destroyed the land." It seems likely that raiding Arab tribes extinguished what remained of a weakened Nabataean culture. In 747 A.D. what was left of the Nabataean cities was destroyed in a major earthquake.Treasury
RY11655. Bronze AE 29, Spijkerman 45, VF, very nice grade for this city, slightly irregular flan, Petra (Jordan) mint, weight 15.03g, maximum diameter 28.6mm, die axis 0o, obverse AVT K M AVP ANTΩNEIN [..], laureate, draped, and cuirassed bust right, seen from behind; reverse AΔPI ΠETPA MHT, Tyche seated left inside distyle temple, holding stele in right and trophy in left; rare; SOLD




  






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