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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Roman Coins| > |The Tetrarchy| > |Galeria Valeria| > RB73874
Galeria Valeria, Augusta June 293(?) - 311 A.D., Second Wife of Galerius
|Galeria| |Valeria|, |Galeria| |Valeria,| |Augusta| |June| |293(?)| |-| |311| |A.D.,| |Second| |Wife| |of| |Galerius|, Venus (Aphrodite) can be faulted for the Trojan War. Upset that she was not invited to a wedding, she went anyway and maliciously left a golden apple inscribed "For the fairest" on the banquet table. The goddesses, as Aphrodite expected, argued who was the rightful possessor of this prize. It was determined the most handsome mortal in the world, a noble Trojan youth named Paris, would decide. Each of the three finalists offered Paris a bribe. Hera promised he would rule the world. Athena said she would make him victorious in battle. Aphrodite guaranteed the love of the most beautiful woman in the world. This was Helen, who was married to the king of Sparta. Paris awarded the golden apple to Aphrodite. Aphrodite enabled Paris to elope with Helen, Helen of Troy. Helen's husband raised a Greek army to retrieve his wife, starting the Trojan War.
RB73874. Billon follis, RIC VI Heraclea p. 537, 50; SRCV IV 14594; Hunter V p. 72, 11 var. (1st officina); Cohen VII p. 129, 2, VF, well centered, light marks and corrosion, 4th officina, Heraclea (Marmara Ereglisi, Turkey) mint, weight 7.106g, maximum diameter 25.3mm, die axis 0o, c. 310 A.D.; obverse GAL VALERIA AVG, draped bust right, wearing stephane, hair in looped plait on neck and up back of head; reverse VENERI VICTRICI (to victorious Venus), Venus standing left, raising apple in right hand, raising drapery over shoulder with left hand, star left, HTΔ in exergue; SOLD










OBVERSE| LEGENDS|

GALVALERIAAVG

REFERENCES|

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