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Home > Members' Coin Collection Galleries > Curtis JJ > Barbarians, Captives, and Enemies on Roman Coins ("BCE Collection")
Captives & Captors: "Rape of the Sabines," Founding Myth of Rome, on Titurius Sabinus Denarius
[b]Roman Republican. L. Titurius L.f. Sabinus AR Denarius[/b] (19mm, 3.89 g, 6 h), Rome 89 BCE. 
[b]Obv[/b]: SABIN Bare-headed and bearded head of King Titus Tatius to right; in field to right, TA monogram.
[b]Rev[/b]: L•TITVRI Rape of the Sabine women. 
[b]Ref[/b]: Babelon (Tituria) 1; Crawford 344/1a.
[b]Prov[/b]: Ex JP Righetti Collection, w/ his handwritten tag (Leu WA 20 [16 Jul 2022], 2263) & J.M.A.L. Collection (formed 1970-2000) (Chaponnière & Firmenich 13 [16 May 2021], 254 [part]). 
[If JMAL sees this & wishes to share more about the provenance & the collection, I would love to hear!]

[b]Notes[/b]: It is often emphasized that the “Rape of the Sabines,” one of Rome’s founding myths, refers to "rape" in an older sense of the word, meaning "abduction." Nonetheless, the purpose of the abduction was to compel marriage and reproduction. Even if the Sabine women (at least some) eventually accepted the marriages in Livy's version, it is difficult to remove the modern reading of "sexual assault" from the myth.
It is quite revealing that Romans publicly took great pride in the myth of their founding fathers kidnapping and forcing the mothers of the first Romans into relationships we’d call slavery today. Two thousand years ago, though, such coercive social relations were far less objectionable (at least to those in power).

Captives & Captors: "Rape of the Sabines," Founding Myth of Rome, on Titurius Sabinus Denarius

Roman Republican. L. Titurius L.f. Sabinus AR Denarius (19mm, 3.89 g, 6 h), Rome 89 BCE.
Obv: SABIN Bare-headed and bearded head of King Titus Tatius to right; in field to right, TA monogram.
Rev: L•TITVRI Rape of the Sabine women.
Ref: Babelon (Tituria) 1; Crawford 344/1a.
Prov: Ex JP Righetti Collection, w/ his handwritten tag (Leu WA 20 [16 Jul 2022], 2263) & J.M.A.L. Collection (formed 1970-2000) (Chaponnière & Firmenich 13 [16 May 2021], 254 [part]).
[If JMAL sees this & wishes to share more about the provenance & the collection, I would love to hear!]

Notes: It is often emphasized that the “Rape of the Sabines,” one of Rome’s founding myths, refers to "rape" in an older sense of the word, meaning "abduction." Nonetheless, the purpose of the abduction was to compel marriage and reproduction. Even if the Sabine women (at least some) eventually accepted the marriages in Livy's version, it is difficult to remove the modern reading of "sexual assault" from the myth.
It is quite revealing that Romans publicly took great pride in the myth of their founding fathers kidnapping and forcing the mothers of the first Romans into relationships we’d call slavery today. Two thousand years ago, though, such coercive social relations were far less objectionable (at least to those in power).

File information
Filename:Titurius_Sabine_Denarius_jpg.jpg
Album name:Curtis JJ / Barbarians, Captives, and Enemies on Roman Coins ("BCE Collection")
Filesize:289 KiB
Date added:Jan 21, 2023
Dimensions:1500 x 728 pixels
Displayed:25 times
URL:https://www.forumancientcoins.com/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=179986
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Page: 1

Jay GT4   [Jan 22, 2023 at 01:06 PM]
Iconic type
Virgil H   [Jan 23, 2023 at 12:39 AM]
Love this one
quadrans   [Jan 24, 2023 at 09:22 PM]
Great piece ..I like it..Smile

Comment 1 to 3 of 3
Page: 1

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