Roman Personalities

178 objectos, criado em 17 set 2018
 A collection of coins that highlight personalities that defined Roman culture from the late Republic to end of the Western Empire. 

A collection of coins that highlight personalities that defined Roman culture from the late Republic to end of the Western Empire. 

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099. Gallienus
099. Gallienus
One of the key characteristics of the Crisis of the Third Century was the inability of the Emperors to maintain their hold on the Imperium for any marked length of time. An exception to...
100. Salonina
100. Salonina
Salonina Antoninianus / Venus Attribution: Van Meter 49 Date: 260-268 AD Obverse: SALONINIA AVG, bust r. Reverse: VENVS VICT, Venus l. holding helmet and scepter Size: 20x17mm Weight: 2.5 grams Description: A decent ant...
101. Saloninus
101. Saloninus
Publius Licinius Cornelius Saloninus (242 - 260) was Roman Emperor in 260. His full title was IMP CAESAR CORNELIUS LICINIUS SALONINUS VALERIANUS PF INVICTUS AUG. Saloninus was born around the year 242. His father...
102. Valerian II
102. Valerian II
Cornelius Licinius Valerianus, also known as Valerian II, was the eldest son of the Roman emperor, Gallienus. Valerian was raised to the title of Caesar shortly after his father was raised to co-emperor with...
103. MACRIANUS
103. MACRIANUS
MACRIANUS MACRIANUS. 260-261 AD. Antoninianus (23mm - 4.50 g). IMP C FVL MACRIANVS P F AVG, radiate and cuirassed bust right / IOVI CONSERVATORI, Jupiter seated left, holding patera in right hand, scepter in...
104. Quietus
104. Quietus
Titus Fulvius Iunius Quietus (d. 261) was a Roman usurper. Quietus was the son of Fulvius Macrianus and a noblewoman, probably named Iulia. He gained the imperial office with his brother Macrianus Minor after...
105. Claudius II
105. Claudius II
Marcus Aurelius Claudius Gothicus (May 10, 213/214 - January, 270), more often referred to as Claudius II, ruled the Roman Empire for less than two years (268 - 270), but during that brief time,...
106. Quintillus
106. Quintillus
Quintillus, August or September - October or November 270 A.D. Marcus Aurelius Claudius Quintillus (d. 270) was brother of the Roman Emperor Claudius II, and became the Emperor himself in 270. Historia Augusta reports...
107. Aurelian
107. Aurelian
Aurelian In 275, Aurelian marched towards Asia Minor, preparing another campaign against the Sassanids: the close deaths of Kings Shapur I (272) and Hormizd I (273), and the rise to power of a weakened...
108. Severina
108. Severina
Severina Silvered antoninianus, RIC 4, S 3285, VF, 3.60g, 23.2mm, Rome mint, obverse SEVERINA AVG, diademed and draped bust right on crescent; reverse CONCORDIAE MILITVM, Concordia holding two standards, A in right field, XXIR...
109. Postumus
109. Postumus
Postumus was recognized as emperor in Gaul, Spain, Germany, and Britain. He set up the capital of his renegade empire at Cologne, complete with its own senate, consuls and praetorian guard. He represented himself...
110. Aureolus
110. Aureolus
Aureolus. Romano-Gallic Usurper, AD 267-268. Antoninianus (19mm, 2.17 g, 7h). Struck in the name of Postumus. Mediolanum (Milan) mint, 2nd officina. 3rd emission, mid AD 268. Radiate, draped, and cuirassed bust of Postumus right...
111. Marius
111. Marius
Marcus Aurelius Marius was emperor of the Gallic Empire in 268. According to later tradition, he was a blacksmith by trade who rose through the ranks of the Roman army to become an officer....
112. Victorinus
112. Victorinus
Marcus Piav(v)onius Victorinus was emperor of the successionist Gallic Empire from 268 to 270 or 271, following the brief reign of Marius. Victorinus, born to a family of great wealth, was a soldier under...
113. Tetricus I
113. Tetricus I
Caius Pius Esuvius Tetricus was emperor of the Gallic Empire from 270/271 to 273, following the murder of Victorinus. Tetricus, who ruled with his son, Tetricus II, was the last of the Gallic Emperors....
114. Tetricus II
114. Tetricus II
Tetricus II was the son of Tetricus I and had exactly the same name as his father: C. Pius Esuvius Tetricus. His date of birth as well as the name of his mother are...
115. Vabalathus
115. Vabalathus
Vabalathus Lucius Julius Aurelius Septimius Vabalathus Athenodorus was the son of the Palmyran king Odenathus and his wife Zenobia. Through the scheming of his gifted mother, Vabalathus was given the titles his father held,...
116. Tacitus
116. Tacitus
Tacitus Marcus Claudius Tacitus, (c.200 - 276) Roman Emperor from September 25, 275, to April 276, was a native of Interamna (Terni) in Umbria. In the course of his long life he discharged the...
117. Florian
117. Florian
Florian After Tacitus died, the army chose Florian to succeed him. His full name as Emperor was Imperator Caesar Marcus Annius Florianus Pius Felix Invictus Augustus. The Historia Augusta characterizes the succession as a...
118. Probus
118. Probus
Probus. 276-282 AD. Antoninianus (4.60 gm). Cyzicus mint. IMP C M AVR PROBVS P F AVG, radiate bust left, wearing imperial mantle and holding eagle-tipped sceptre / SO-LI INVICT-O, Sol, head left, in spread...
119. Carus
119. Carus
Marcus Aurelius Carus (c. 230 - late July/early August, 283), Roman emperor (282-283), was born probably at Narbona (more correctly, Narona -- now the ruins at Vid, Croatia) in Illyria, but was educated at...
120. Carinus
120. Carinus
Marcus Aurelius Carinus, Roman emperor, 283 - July, 285, was the elder son of the emperor Carus, on whose accession he was appointed governor of the western portion of the empire. He fought with...
121. MAGNIA URBICA
121. MAGNIA URBICA
MAGNIA URBICA, wife of Carinus. Æ Antoninianus (3.30 gm). Rome mint. MAG VRBICA AVG, diademed and draped bust right on crescent / IONO REGINA, Juno standing left, holding patera and scepter; KA?. RIC V...
122. Nigrinian
122. Nigrinian
Divus Nigrinian.  Died circa AD 284. Antoninianus (21mm, 2.11 g, 12h). Rome mint, uncertain officina. 5th emission of Carinus, November AD 284. Radiate head right / Eagle standing facing, head left, with wings spread;...
123. Numerian
123. Numerian
Marcus Aurelius Numerius Numerianus was the younger son of the later emperor Carus, born in about AD 253. Numerian and his elder brother Carinus were raised to the rank of Caesar in AD 282,...
124. Diocletian
124. Diocletian
The Emperor Gaius Aurelius Valerius Diocletianus (A.D. 284-305) put an end to the disastrous phase of Roman history known as the "Military Anarchy" or the "Imperial Crisis" (235-284). He established an obvious military despotism...
125. Maximianus
125. Maximianus
Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus Herculius (c. 250 - July, 310), known in English as Maximian, was Roman Emperor (together with Diocletian) from March 1, 286 to 305. Born to a poor family near Sirmium...
126. Galerius
126. Galerius
Christians had lived in peace during most of the rule of Diocletian. The persecutions that began with an edict of February 24, 303, were credited by Christians to the influence of Galerius. Christian houses...
127. Constantius I
127. Constantius I
Born March 31st, Emperor Flavius Valerius Constantius may have come into the world ca. 250. His family was from Illyricum. In the army he served as a protector, tribunus, and a praeses Dalmatiarum. During...
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128. Carausius
128. Carausius
Marcus Aurelius Mausaeus Carausius (d. 293) was a Roman usurper in Britain and northern Gaul (286–293, Carausian Revolt). Carausius was a man of humble origin, a Menapian from Belgic Gaul who distinguished himself during...
129. Allectus
129. Allectus
In 296, Constantius and his praefectus praetorio Asclepiodotus each took a fleet and headed for Britain; although some of the Caesar's fleet seems to have turned back because of inclement weather, Asclepiodotus' forces succeeded...
130. Maxentius
130. Maxentius
Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maxentius, more commonly known as Maxentius, was the child of the Emperor Maximianus Herculius and the Syrian Eutropia; he was born ca. 278 A.D. After Galerius' appointment to the rank of...
131. Maximinus Daia
131. Maximinus Daia
Caius Valerius Galerius Maximinus, more commonly known as Maximinus Daia or Daza, was from Illyricum and was of peasant origin. He was born 20 November perhaps in the year 270. Daia was the son...
132. Galeria Valeria
132. Galeria Valeria
Galeria Valeria was Diocletian's daughter and, to cement the alliance between Diocletian and Galerius, Valeria was married to Galerius. It appears that this was not a very happy marriage. Galeria Valeria was sympathetic towards...
133. Severus II
133. Severus II
Flavius Valerius Severus was of humble origin and from Illyricum. Early in his career he had held a military command. When Diocletian, at Nicomedeia, and Maximianus Herculius, at Mediolanum, divested themselves of the purple...
134. Divus Romulus
134. Divus Romulus
Divus Romulus, Quarter Follis. Struck late 309-312 AD. DIVO ROMVLO N V BIS C, bare head right / AETERNAE MEMORIAE, Eagle with wings spread standing right on domed shrine, MOSTQ in ex.
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135. Constantine the Great
135. Constantine the Great
Constantine the Great AE3. 328-9 AD. CONSTANTINVS AVG, diademed head right / PROVIDENTIAE AVGG, campgate with two turrets & no doors, star above, BSIS(double-crescent) in ex. RIC VII Siscia 214
136. Licinius I
136. Licinius I
Flavius Galerius Valerius Licinianus Licinius (c. 250 - 325) was Roman emperor from 308 to 324. Of Dacian peasant origin, born in Moesia Superior, Licinius accompanied his close friend the Emperor Galerius on the...
137. Licinius II
137. Licinius II
Licinius II as Caesar, ?3. D N VAL LICIN LICINIVS NOB C, diademed bust left with mappa & scepter / IOVI CONS ERVATORI CAESS Jupiter standing, head left, with Victory, captive at feet, D...
138. Theodora
138. Theodora
Flavia Maximiana Theodora (known as Theodora) was the step-daughter of Maximian. Her parents were Afanius Hannibalianus and Eutropia, later wife of Maximian. Theodora's father was consul in 292, and praetorian prefect under Diocletian. In...
139. Helena
139. Helena
Flavia Iulia Helena, also known as Saint Helena, Saint Helen, Helena Augusta, and Helena of Constantinople, (c.248 - c.329) was the first wife of Constantius Chlorus, and the mother of Emperor Constantine I. She...
140. Fausta
140. Fausta
Fausta Flavia Maxima was the daughter of the Roman Emperor Maximianus. To seal the alliance between them for control of the Tetrarchy, Maximianus married her to Constantine I in 307. It is suspected that...
141. Crispus
141. Crispus
In 326, Crispus was suddenly executed according to the orders of his own father in Pola, Istria. Though the decision of Constantine was certainly cruel and unexpected, historians remain more interested in the motivation...
142. Constantine II
142. Constantine II
Flavius Claudius Constantinus, known in English as Constantine II, (316 - 340) was Roman Emperor (337 - 340). The eldest son of Constantine I and Fausta, he was born at Arles, and was raised...
143. Constantius II
143. Constantius II
Flavius Iulius Constantius, known in English as Constantius II, (7 August 317 - 3 November 361) was a Roman Emperor (337 - 361) of the Constantinian dynasty Constantius was the second of the three...
144. Constans
144. Constans
Flavius Julius Constans (320 - January 18, 350), was a Roman Emperor who ruled from 337 to 350. Constans was the third and youngest son of Constantine the Great and Fausta, Constantine's second wife....
145. Constantius Gallus
145. Constantius Gallus
Flavius Claudius Constantius Gallus (c. 325/326 - 354), better known as Gallus Caesar, was a member of the Constantinian dynasty and Caesar of the Eastern Roman Empire (351-354). Gallus was consul three years, from...
146. Delmatius
146. Delmatius
Delmatius - Caesar 335-7  Obv: Bust of Delmatius right "FL DELMATIVS NOB C" Rev: Two soldiers holding spears and shields with a standard between "GLORIA EXERITVS" RIC 266
147. Hanniballianus
147. Hanniballianus
Hanniballianus. A.D. 335-337.  Dalmatius's second son, Hannibalianus, was appointed Governor of Pontus, as well as Cappadocia and Lesser or Roman Armenia. Hannibalianus also received the title Rex Regum, which some scholars believe suggests that...
148. Magnentius
148. Magnentius
Magnentius (ruled AD January 18, 350–August 11, 353), was a Roman usurper. Dissatisfaction amongst the ranks of the Roman army with Constans came to a head with the elevation of Magnentius at Autun on...
149. Decentius
149. Decentius
Magnus Decentius (d. 18 August 353) was a Roman usurper against Roman Emperor Constantius II. Probably brother of Magnentius, Decentius was made Caesar by him in winter 350/351, and was consul in 352 and...
150. VETRANIO
150. VETRANIO
VETRANIO. 350 AD. Constantius first met with Vetranio at Serdica, and both moved on to Naissus in Serbia. On 25 December 350 both men mounted a platform before the assembled troops; Constantius managed, by...
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