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brm_622535 - SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS Denier

SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS Denier VF
Not available.
Item sold on our e-shop (2023)
Price : 50.00 €
Type : Denier
Date: 194
Mint name / Town : Laodicée
Metal : silver
Millesimal fineness : 500 ‰
Diameter : 18 mm
Orientation dies : 1 h.
Weight : 2,76 g.
Rarity : R1
Officine: 3e
Coments on the condition:
Monnaie centrée. Joli portrait. Usure régulière. Patine grise
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : L SEPT SEV PE-RT AVG IMP III.
Obverse description : Tête laurée de Septime Sévère à droite (O*).
Obverse translation : "Lucius Septimus Severus Pertinax Augustus Imperator tertium" (Lucius Septime Sévère Pertinax auguste revêtu de la troisième acclamation impériale).

Reverse


Reverse legend : PA-CI A-VGVSTI.
Reverse description : Pax (la Paix) assise à gauche, tenant une branche d'olivier de la main droite et une corne d’abondance de la gauche.
Reverse translation : "Paci Augusti", (À la Paix de l'auguste).

Commentary


Poids léger. Souvent ce type est donné à la troisième émission de Rome (BMC. 70 et H.2/86) daté de 194. Il faut plutôt le restituer à l’atelier de Laodicée.

Historical background


SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS

(13/04/193-4/02/211)

Septimius Severus was born in 146 in Leptis Magna in Africa (Libya). After a brilliant military career under the reigns of Marc Aurèle and Commodus, he was consul suffect in 185. At the time of Pertinax's death, he was governor of Upper Pannonia. Acclaimed emperor on April 13, 193, he quickly eliminated Dide Julien, his compatriot (June 28), and associated Albin with power as Caesar before fighting Pescennius Niger in the East. In 195, he fictitiously entered the Antonine family by being adopted post-mortem. He defeats and executes Niger and leads a brilliant campaign in Arabia. In 197, he got rid of his last adversary, Albin, who proclaimed himself august. Severus prepares the establishment of his dynasty by giving the title of Augusta to Julia, his wife, in 194, of Caesar to Caracalla, in 196, then of Augustus in 198 when Geta, his second son, becomes Caesar. Sévère will spend fifteen years consolidating the borders of the Empire by winning numerous victories over the Parthians (197-198), then in Africa (207) and, finally in Brittany (208-211), where he died..

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