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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Roman Coins| > |The Twelve Caesars| > |Titus| > RS94486
Titus, 24 June 79 - 13 September 81 A.D.
|Titus|, |Titus,| |24| |June| |79| |-| |13| |September| |81| |A.D.|, Ceres' known mythology is indistinguishable from Demeter's. Her virgin daughter Proserpina (Persephone) was abducted by Hades to be his wife in the underworld. Ceres searched for her endlessly lighting her way through the earth with torches. While Ceres (Demeter) searched, she was preoccupied with her loss and her grief. The seasons halted; living things ceased their growth, then began to die. Some say that in her anger she laid a curse on the world that caused plants to wither and die, and the land to become desolate. Faced with the extinction of all life on earth, Zeus sent his messenger Hermes to the underworld to bring Proserpina back. However, because she had eaten while in the underworld, Hades had a claim on her. Therefore, it was decreed that she would spend four months each year in the underworld. During these months Ceres grieves for her daughter's absence, withdrawing her gifts from the world, creating winter. Proserpina's return brings the spring.
RS94486. Silver denarius, RIC II-1 Vespasian 974 (R); RSC II 31; BMCRE II Vespasian 321; BnF III Vespasian 282, Hunter I V35, SRCV I 2437, gVF, superb portrait, toned, light marks, small flan, reverse die wear, edge split, Rome mint, weight 2.699g, maximum diameter 18.0mm, die axis 180o, as caesar, 77 - 78 A.D.; obverse T CAESAR VESPASIANVS AVG, laureate head right; reverse CERES AVGVST, Ceres standing half-left, veiled and draped, two stalks of grain and poppy in right hand, long scepter vertical behind in left hand; from an Israeli collection; rare; SOLD











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