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monnaies antiques romaines imperiales et republicaines 207 1 decimia or flavia 150 bc

AR Denarius (Rome, 150 BC)

O/ Helmeted head of Roma right; X behind.

R/ Luna in biga right, holding whip & reins; FLAVS below; ROMA in exergue.

3.95g; 19mm

Crawford 207/1 (61 obverse dies/76 reverse dies)

- Collection of Frederick Sydney Clark (1923-2016), British collector in East Sussex.

- Toovey's, 01/11/2017, Lot 701. 

Decimius Flavus or Gaius Flavius Fimbria:

This issue has been given to a member of the plebeian gens Decimia, of Samnite origin.  The gens was relatively new at the time since its first identified member Numerius Decimius distinguished himself during the Second Punic War (Livy, XXII, 24), and probably received the Roman citizenship as a result.   Two Decimii used the cognomen Flavus: a military tribune in 207 named Gaius Decimius Flavus (Livy, XXVII, 14), and his probable son of the same name, who was Urban Praetor in 184, but died immediately after his election (Livy, XXXIX, 38).

Three other Decimii are then known: Marcus, Gaius, and Lucius, all ambassadors in Greece in 172-171 (Livy, XLII, 19, 35, 37 respectively).  They were possible sons of the Praetor of 184, in which case our moneyer was the son of one of them, although nothing is known of him.  However, none of them had a cognomen and Flavus simply meant "blond hair", a rather common cognomen unlikely to feature alone on a coin.

So the name could refer to another gens; it is indeed possible to read it as FLAVIVS.  This name, widespread during the Empire after Vespasian, was nevertheless uncommon in the second century and therefore distinctive enough so that the moneyer did not need to add the rest of his name.  Besides, only one Flavius is known in this century: the Popularis Gaius Flavius C.f. Fimbria, Consul in 104 alongside Marius.  Fimbria was therefore born no later than 146 (the Consulship was reserved to men aged at least 42 years old), a date which would remarkably fit with his father moneyer in 150 and therefore in his 20s.  As Fimbria was a novus homo, the moneyership held by his father would testify the ascension of the family before him.

Referência : 207/1

Coleção : Roman Republic

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