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XXI
Latin: Lord.
Please add updates or make corrections to the NumisWiki text version as appropriate.
Antoninus Pius was the first to whom the title of Dominus was applied on coins; but it was Greece and Asia--conquered Greece and captured Asia--which furnished the instances, as usual, of extreme adulation. The word kyrios (Lord) is found on a coin of Antioch ad Hippum, in Decapolis--thus AUTOKR. KUR. ANTWNEINO c. Shortly afterwards, on coins of M. Aurelius and his family, struck in Mesopotamia, a similar use is made of the word kyrios. On coins of the colony of Antioch, in Pisidia, with the heads of Caracalla and Geta, we read VICT. DD. NN. And on a coin of Gordianus Pius, minted in the same colony, applears VICTORIA DOMINI.
The foregoing examples, however, belong only to the foregn coinage. It was the Emperor Aurelian who first introduced the title Dominus upon coins of Roman die, when he allowed the following inscription to appear:--DEO ET DOMINO NATO (on others (NOSTRO) AVRELIANO AVG. (see p. 319 of this dictionary). Next to the above, in point of time, Diocletianus and Maximinus, received the distinction of D.N. but not until their abdication of the empire (A.D. 305). Afterwards, it was conferred more frequently on the Caesars than on the Emprors, though for what reason is uncertain. Lastly, from the times of the sons of Constantine the Great, it became a common prenomen, that of IMPerator being gradually abolished. And at length it was rendered so much matter of course, that if any one in the reign of Justinian, had used the word Imperator instead of Dominus, and of Augusta instead of Domina, he would have been considered guilty of an insult, or at least of great ignorance.--See Doct. Num. Vet. viii. p. 364-5-6.