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coins ancient to other 01i traian decius aureus pannoniae

01i Traian Decius Aureus PANNONIAE

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Ruler: Traian Decius, AD 249-251.

Obverse: IMP C[aius] M[essius] Q[uintus] TRAIANVS DECIVS AVG, laureate and cuirassed bust to right

Reverse:  PANNONIAE, the two Pannoniae, veiled and draped, standing facing, their heads turned to left and right, each holding standard pointed outwards. 

Mint: Rome AD 249-251.

Denomination: Aureus

Weight: 4,37 g, 19 mm.

Reference: RIC IV 21a 

Note: Trajan Decius was acclaimed emperor by his troops while campaigning in Moesia and Pannonia on behalf of Philip I 'the Arab'. He had been sent to quell the revolt of the usurper Pacatian, who had been proclaimed emperor himself by his troops but was, ultimately, also killed by them before the intervention of Decius. According to Zosimus, Decius was apparently reluctant and unwilling to take power. However, having taken the purple, Philip now advanced against Decius and the two met in battle near Verona, where Philip's forces were routed and he himself was killed. Subsequently, Decius' accession was recognized by the Senate, who conferred on him the name Traianus in reference to his predecessor Trajan, the optimus princeps ('best ruler') of the Roman Empire.

Taking the name of Trajan was more than simple vainglory - in the first Dacian War of AD 101-102 Trajan had reduced the Danube region to the status of a client kingdom, later absorbing it into the empire after the second Dacian War in 105-106. The new emperor, who hailed from the very same region, was seen to have already quelled a revolt in the troubled frontier area, and it was hoped he would restore the strength of the State.

This however was not to be. Barbarian incursions into the empire were becoming more frequent and more daring, while internally the empire was weakened and unable to secure its frontiers. In 250-251 a major Gothic incursion crossed the Danube and raided parts of Moesia and Thrace. Decius surprised the Goths as they were laying siege to Nicopolis, and while they at first made to retreat, they doubled back and in turn caught Decius unprepared, dispersing the Roman army and sacking their camp.

Once the Roman army had reformed, Decius again marched to confront the Gothic invaders along with his son Herennius Etruscus and the general Trebonianus Gallus. At the Battle of Abritus in the second week of June 251 on a swampy patch of ground the Roman army initially routed the Goths' front line, but made the mistake of pursuing their opponents into the swamp where they were ambushed and destroyed under a barrage of missiles. Both Herennius Etruscus and Decius were slain, their bodies never recovered. Decius' pay-chests amounting to several tons of gold, along with many weapons, were despoiled by the Goths and have since been discovered hoarded in many locations throughout the historic Gothic territories (The Battle of Abritus, the Imperial Treasury and Aurei in Barbaricum, Numismatic Chronicle 173, 2013, p. 151).

Trajan Decius thus earned for himself the dubious distinction of becoming the first reigning Augustus to be killed in battle by a foreign enemy. Trebonianus Gallus, maligned by Zosimus (1.25), became emperor on Decius' death, and adopted his predecessor's younger son, Hostilian, as joint emperor despite the latter's young age preventing him from ruling in his own right.

Złote monety C. Messiusa Quintusa Deciusa, którzy po obwołaniu cesarzem przez wojska Panonii na przełomie września i października 249 r. przyjął dodatkowo imię Trajana, są zdecydowanie rzadsze od licznych za jego krótkiego panowania emisji antoninianów. Na obydwu nominałach powtarzają się jednak często te same motywy, jak choćby właśnie PANNONIAE, szczególnie bliskie Decjuszowi, który nie tylko został tam obwołany cesarzem, ale również stamtąd (konkretnie z okolic Sirmium) pochodził. Decjusz mógł mieć nadzieję na długie rządy i stworzenie dynastii. Najpierw w połowie 250 do rangi formalnego następcy tronu (cezara) wyniósł swego starszego syna, Herenniusza Etruskusa, we wrześniu tego samego roku młodszego – Hostyliana. Wkrótce jednak sam cesarz wraz z dopiero co podniesionym do rangi wspsółpanującego augusta Herenniuszem musiał przystąpić do wojny z najeżdżającymi prowincje naddunajskie Gotami. Do decydującego starcia doszło w czerwcu pod Abrittus (obecnie okolice Razgradu w Bułgarii) w czerwcu 251. Najpierw w bitwie zginął Herenniusz, potem sam Decjusz. Była to pierwsza w historii śmierć cesarza rzymskiego w walce z wrogiem zewnętrznym. Rzymska armia została rozgromiona, a skarbiec cesarski dostał się w ręce Gotów. Miało to daleko idące skutki również numizmatyczne – wiele złotych monet Decjusza trafiło na obszary Barbaricum (w tym na tereny współczesnej Polski), zaś w kolejnym pokoleniu wpłynęło na rozwój naśladownictw w złocie monet rzymskich przede wszystkim wśród plemion gockich z obszaru dzisiejszej Ukrainy.
 
(tekst Bartosz Awianowicz)

Collezione : 18b Roman Aurei

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