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brm_473367 - AURELIAN Aurelianus

AURELIAN Aurelianus MS
Not available.
Item sold on our e-shop (2019)
Price : 125.00 €
Type : Aurelianus
Date: octobre 274
Mint name / Town : Ticinum
Metal : billon
Millesimal fineness : 50 ‰
Diameter : 23 mm
Orientation dies : 6 h.
Weight : 4,31 g.
Rarity : R1
Officine: 3e
Coments on the condition:
Magnifique monnaie sur un flan ovale et épais, avec un buste de toute beauté et un revers sans usure. Patine grise avec une argenture encore présente

Obverse


Obverse legend : IMP C AVRELIANVS AVG.
Obverse description : Buste radié et cuirassé d’Aurélien à droite, vu de trois quarts en avant (B).
Obverse translation : “Imperator Caesar Aurelianus Augustus”, (L’empereur césar Aurélien auguste).

Reverse


Reverse legend : ORI-E-NS AVG// TXXT.
Reverse description : Sol (Le Soleil) radié, nu, le manteau sur l’épaule gauche, debout à gauche, levant la main droite, tenant un globe de la gauche, et posant le pied droit sur un prisonnier assis les mains liées dans le dos ; à ses pieds, à droite, un autre prisonnier assis, les mains liées dans le dos.
Reverse translation : “Oriens Augusti”, (L’Orient de l’auguste).

Commentary


Correspond au RIC temp. 1541 (35 ex.). Nous n’avions pas proposé ce type depuis ROME X (n°264) en 2001 !.

Historical background


AURELIAN

(07/270-09/275)

Aurelian was born around 207 in Sirmium. After a brilliant military career, he was proclaimed august at Sirmium after the death of Claudius II and remained sole emperor after the suicide of Quintille. He made the painful decision to abandon Dacia in 271 and then attacked Zenobia and Vaballath by seizing Palmyra in 272. Then he undertook the reconquest of the Gallic Empire and defeated Tetricus at Châlons. He triumphs in Rome and saves the life of his famous prisoners. He was assassinated when he was preparing a campaign against the Sassanids in order to reconquer Mesopotamia. With the reform, Aurélien tried to recreate a truly coherent monetary system that had completely disappeared since the end of Gallien's reign. A return to monetary orthodoxy, the victories over Palmyra and the Gallic Empire allowed this monetary restoration which was to survive somehow until the reform of Diocletian in 294. Apparently the denarius, sometimes silver, was worth half the new coin called aurelianus or antoninianus.

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