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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Roman Coins| > |Crisis & Decline| > |Valerian I| > RS64709
Valerian I, October 253 - c. June 260 A.D.
|Valerian| |I|, |Valerian| |I,| |October| |253| |-| |c.| |June| |260| |A.D.|, To the ancient Romans, Rome was "Roma Aeterna" (The Eternal City) and "Caput Mundi" (Capital of the World). During the Early Middle Ages, the population fell to a mere 20,000, reducing the sprawling city to groups of inhabited buildings interspersed among large areas of ruins and vegetation. The empire is history but Rome is still today, the Eternal City. Rome's influence on Western Civilization can hardly be overestimated; perhaps a greater influence than any other city on earth, making important contributions to politics, literature, culture, the arts, architecture, music, religion, education, fashion, cinema and cuisine.
RS64709. Billon antoninianus, Göbl MIR 1571a, RIC V-1 221, RSC IV 192a, Cunetio 806 (1 spec.), Hunter IV 7, SRCV III 9970, VF, excellent portrait, centered on a tight flan, light marks, light deposits, weak reverse, Antioch (Antakya, Turkey) mint, weight 4.564g, maximum diameter 20.1mm, die axis 180o, 254 - 256 A.D.; obverse IMP C P LIC VALERIANVS AVG, radiate and draped bust right; reverse ROMAE AETERNAE (to eternal Rome), Roma seated left on shield, Victory offering wreath in her extended right hand, spear in her left hand; SOLD




  






REFERENCES|

Huvelin, H. "L'atelier d'Antioche sous Claude II" in NAC XIX (1990), pp. 251-271.
McAlee, R. The Coins of Roman Antioch. (Lancaster, PA, 2007).
Prieur, M. & K. Prieur. The Syro-Phoenician Tetradrachms and their fractions from 57 BC to AD 258. (Lancaster, PA, 2000).
Van Heesch, J. "The last civic coinages and the religious policy of Maximinus Daza (AD 312)" in Numismatic Chronicle 1993, pp. 65 - 75, pl. 11.

Catalog current as of Wednesday, April 24, 2024.
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