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DOMITIAN 95AD Ascalon in Judaea City-Goddess Authentic Ancient Roman Coin i47328

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    Description

    Item:
    i47328
    Authentic Ancient Coin of:
    Domitian - Roman Caesar: 69-81 A.D.
    Emperor
    : 81-96 A.D. -
    Bronze 24mm (10.85 grams) of Ascalon in Judaea
    Reference:
    Sear GIC 884 var.; B.M.C.27.121,119 var.;
    RPC II 2212 var.; Rosenberger 114 var.; SNG ANS 697 var.
    CЄBACTOC, Laureate head right.
    ACKAΛΩ - City-goddess standing left on prow, holding standard and aphlaston; altar on left, dove on right above year.
    You are bidding on the exact item pictured, provided with a Certificate of Authenticity and Lifetime Guarantee of Authenticity.
    Judea
    (
    Latin
    :
    IVDAEA
    ), sometimes spelled in its original Latin forms of
    Judæa
    ,
    Judaea
    or
    Iudaea
    to distinguish it from
    Judea
    proper, is a term used by historians to refer to the
    Roman province
    that incorporated the geographical regions of
    Judea
    ,
    Samaria
    , and
    Idumea
    , and which extended over parts of the former regions of the
    Hasmonean
    and
    Herodian
    kingdoms of Israel. It was named after
    Herod Archelaus
    's
    Tetrarchy of Judea
    , of which it was an expansion, the latter name deriving from the
    Kingdom of Judah
    of the 6th century BCE.
    Rome's involvement in the area dated from 63 BCE, following the end of the
    Third Mithridatic War
    , when Rome made
    Syria
    a province. In that year, after the defeat of
    Mithridates VI of Pontus
    , the
    proconsul
    Pompeius Magnus (
    Pompey the Great
    )
    sacked Jerusalem
    and entered the
    Jerusalem Temple
    . Subsequently, during the 1st century BCE, the
    Herodian Kingdom
    was established as a Roman
    client kingdom
    and then in 6 CE parts became a
    province
    of the
    Roman Empire
    .
    Judea province was the scene of unrest at its founding during the
    Census of Quirinius
    and several wars were fought in its history, known as the
    Jewish-Roman wars
    .
    The Temple was destroyed in 70
    as part of the
    Great Jewish Revolt
    resulting in the institution of the
    Fiscus Judaicus
    , and after
    Bar Kokhba's revolt
    (132–135 CE), the Roman Emperor
    Hadrian
    changed the name of the province to
    Syria Palaestina
    and
    Jerusalem
    to
    Aelia Capitolina
    , which certain scholars conclude was done in an attempt to remove the relationship of the Jewish people to the region.
    Relations with Hasmonean and Herodian dynasties
    Pompey in the Temple of Jerusalem
    , by
    Jean Fouquet
    The first intervention of Rome in the region dates from 63 BCE, following the end of the
    Third Mithridatic War
    , when Rome made a province of
    Syria
    . After the defeat of
    Mithridates VI of Pontus
    ,
    Pompey
    (Pompey the Great) remained there to secure the area.
    The region at the time was not a peaceful place. The Queen of Judaea
    Salome Alexandra
    had recently died and her sons,
    Hyrcanus II
    and
    Aristobulus II
    , divided against each other in a civil war.
    In 63 BCE, Aristobulus was besieged in
    Jerusalem
    by his brother's armies. He sent an envoy to
    Marcus Aemilius Scaurus
    , Pompey's representative in the area. Aristobulus offered a massive bribe to be rescued, which Pompey promptly accepted. Afterwards, Aristobulus accused Scaurus of extortion. Since Scaurus was Pompey's brother in law and protégée, the general retaliated by putting Hyrcanus in charge of the kingdom as
    Ethnarch
    and
    High Priest
    , but he was denied the title of King.
    When Pompey was defeated by
    Julius Caesar
    , Hyrcanus was succeeded by his
    courtier
    Antipater the Idumaean
    , also known as Antipas, as the first
    Roman Procurator
    . In 57–55 BCE,
    Aulus Gabinius
    , proconsul of
    Syria
    , split the former
    Hasmonean
    Kingdom of Israel into five districts of the
    Sanhedrin
    .
    Both Caesar and Antipater were killed in 44 BCE, and the
    Idumean
    Herod the Great
    , Antipater's son, was designated "
    King of the Jews
    " by the
    Roman Senate
    in 40 BCE.
    [5]
    He didn't gain military control until 37 BCE. During his reign the last representatives of the
    Maccabees
    were eliminated, and the great port of
    Caesarea Maritima
    was built. He died in 4 BCE, and his kingdom was divided among his sons, who became
    tetrarchs
    ("rulers of a quarter part"). One of these quarters was
    Judea
    corresponding to the region of the ancient Kingdom of Judah. Herod's son
    Herod Archelaus
    , ruled Judea so badly that he was dismissed in 6 CE by the
    Roman emperor
    Augustus
    , after an appeal from his own population. Another,
    Herod Antipas
    , ruled as
    tetrarch
    of Galilee and Perea from 4 BCE to 39 CE, being then dismissed by
    Caligula
    .
    Judea as Roman province
    The Roman empire in the time of
    Hadrian
    (ruled 117–138 CE), showing, in western Asia, the Roman province of Iudaea. 1
    legion
    deployed in 125.
    In 6 CE Judea became part of a larger Roman province, called
    Iudaea
    , which was formed by combining
    Judea proper
    (biblical
    Judah
    ) with
    Samaria
    and Idumea (biblical
    Edom
    ).
    [6]
    Even though
    Iudaea
    is simply derived from the Latin for
    Judea
    , many historians use it to distinguish the Roman province from the previous territory and history. Iudaea province did not include
    Galilee
    ,
    Gaulanitis
    (the Golan), nor
    Peraea
    or the
    Decapolis
    . Its revenue was of little importance to the Roman treasury, but it controlled the land and coastal sea routes to the bread basket
    Egypt
    and was a border province against the
    Parthian Empire
    because of the Jewish connections to
    Babylonia
    (since the
    Babylonian exile
    ). The capital was at
    Caesarea
    , not
    Jerusalem
    , which had been the capital for
    King David
    ,
    King Hezekiah
    ,
    King Josiah
    , the
    Maccabees
    and
    Herod the Great
    .
    Quirinius
    became
    Legate
    (Governor) of
    Syria
    and conducted the first
    Roman tax census of Syria and Iudaea
    , which was opposed by the
    Zealots
    . Iudaea was not a
    Senatorial province
    , nor exactly an
    Imperial province
    , but instead was a "satellite of Syria"
    governed
    by a
    prefect
    who was a
    knight of the equestrian order
    (as was
    Roman Egypt
    ), not a former
    consul
    or
    praetor
    of
    senatorial rank
    .
    Pontius Pilate
    was one of these prefects, from 26 to 36 CE.
    Caiaphas
    was one of the appointed
    High Priests
    of
    Herod's Temple
    , being appointed by the Prefect
    Valerius Gratus
    in 18. Both were deposed by the Syrian Legate
    Lucius Vitellius
    in 36 CE.
    The 'Crisis under
    Caligula
    ' (37–41) has been proposed as the first open break between Rome and the Jews.
    Between 41 and 44 CE, Iudaea regained its nominal
    autonomy
    , when
    Herod Agrippa
    was made King of the Jews by the emperor
    Claudius
    , thus in a sense restoring the Herodian Dynasty, though there is no indication Iudaea ceased to be a Roman province simply because it no longer had a prefect. Claudius had decided to allow, across the empire,
    procurators
    , who had been personal agents to the Emperor often serving as provincial
    tax
    and finance ministers, to be elevated to governing magistrates with full state authority to keep the peace. He elevated Iudaeas's procurator whom he trusted to imperial governing status because the imperial legate of Syria was not sympathetic to the Judeans. Following Agrippa's death in 44 CE, the province returned to direct Roman control for a short period. Agrippa's son
    Marcus Julius Agrippa
    was designated King of the Jews in 48. He was the seventh and last of the
    Herodians
    . From 70 CE until 135 CE, Iudaea's rebelliousness required a governing Roman
    legate
    capable of commanding legions. Because Agrippa II maintained loyalty to the Empire, the Kingdom was retained until he died, either in 93/94 or 100, when the area returned to complete, undivided
    Roman Empire
    control.
    Judaea was the stage of three major
    rebellions against Roman rule
    :
    66–70 CE - first rebellion, followed by the destruction of
    Herod's Temple
    and the siege of
    Jerusalem
    (see
    Great Jewish Revolt
    ,
    Josephus
    )
    115–117 CE - second rebellion, called
    Kitos War
    132–135 CE - third rebellion,
    Bar Kokhba's revolt
    Following the suppression of Bar Kokhba's revolt, the emperor
    Hadrian
    changed the name of the province to
    Syria Palaestina
    and Jerusalem became
    Aelia Capitolina
    which
    Hayim Hillel Ben-Sasson
    states was done to erase the historical ties of the Jewish people to the region.
    Under
    Diocletian
    (284-305) the region was divided into
    Palaestina Prima
    (Judea, Samaria, Idumea, Peraea and the coastal plain with Caesarea as capital),
    Palaestina Secunda
    (Galilee, Decapolis, Golan with Beth-shean as capital) and
    Palaestina Tertia
    (the Negev with Petra as capital).
    Titus Flavius Domitianus
    (24 October 51 – 18 September 96), known as
    Domitian
    , was a
    Roman Emperor
    who reigned from 14 September 81 until his death. Domitian was the third and last emperor of the
    Flavian dynasty
    , the house which ruled the
    Roman Empire
    between 69 and 96 and encompassed the reigns of Domitian's father
    Vespasian
    (69–79), his older brother
    Titus
    (79–81), and that of Domitian himself.
    Domitian's youth and early career were largely spent in the shadow of his brother Titus, who gained military renown during the
    First Jewish-Roman War
    . This situation continued under the rule of Vespasian, who became emperor on 21 December 69 following the
    civil war
    known as the
    Year of the Four Emperors
    . While Titus effectually reigned as co-emperor with his father, Domitian was left with honours but no responsibilities. Vespasian died on 23 June 79 and was succeeded by Titus, whose own reign came to an unexpected end when he was struck by a fatal illness on 13 September 81. The following day Domitian was declared emperor by the
    Praetorian Guard
    , commencing a reign which lasted fifteen years—longer than any man who had governed Rome since
    Tiberius
    .
    As emperor, Domitian strengthened the economy by revaluing the
    Roman coinage
    , expanded the border defenses of the Empire, and initiated a massive building programme to restore the damaged city of
    Rome
    . Significant wars were fought in Britain, where
    Gnaeus Julius Agricola
    expanded the Roman Empire as far as modern day
    Scotland
    , and in
    Dacia
    , where Domitian was unable to procure a decisive victory against king
    Decebalus
    . Domitian's government nonetheless exhibited
    totalitarian
    characteristics. As emperor, he saw himself as the new
    Augustus
    , an enlightened despot destined to guide the Roman Empire into a new era of Flavian renaissance. Religious, military, and cultural
    propaganda
    fostered a
    cult of personality
    , and by nominating himself perpetual
    censor
    , he sought to control public and private morals. As a consequence, Domitian was popular with the people and the army but despised by members of the
    Roman Senate
    as a tyrant.
    Domitian's reign came to an end on 18 September 96 when he was assassinated by court officials. The same day he was succeeded by his friend and advisor
    Nerva
    , who founded the long-lasting
    Nerva-Antonine dynasty
    . After his death, Domitian's memory was
    condemned to oblivion
    by the Roman Senate, while senatorial authors such as
    Tacitus
    ,
    Pliny the Younger
    and
    Suetonius
    published histories propagating the view of Domitian as a cruel and paranoid tyrant. Modern history has rejected these views, instead characterising Domitian as a ruthless but efficient autocrat, whose cultural, economic and political programme provided the foundation of the peaceful 2nd century.
    Domitia Longina
    (b. 53 – c. 130) was an Empress and wife to the
    Roman Emperor
    Domitian
    . She was the youngest daughter of the general and
    consul
    Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo
    . Domitia divorced her first husband
    Lucius Aelius Lamia
    in order to marry Domitian in 71. The marriage produced only one son, whose early death is believed to have been the cause of temporary rift between Domitia and her husband in 83. She became Empress of Rome upon Domitian's accession in 81, and remained so until his
    assassination
    in 96. She is believed to have died sometime between 126 and 130.
    Family
    Domitia Longina was born sometime between 50 and 55, as the youngest daughter to the family of
    Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo
    and Cassia Longina.
    [1]
    Through her mother (a great-great-great granddaughter of Augustus), Domitia Longina was a direct descendant of
    Augustus Caesar
    and one of the last remaining members of the Julian lineage. Her paternal aunt was Milonia
    Caesonia
    , Roman Empress to
    Caligula
    . Her elder sister,
    Domitia Corbula
    , married the senator Lucius Annius Vinicianus. Domitia's father Corbulo had been one of Rome's most respected Senators and generals, serving as
    consul
    under Caligula, and conducting military campaigns in
    Germania
    and
    Parthia
    under
    Claudius
    and
    Nero
    .
    [1]
    Following the failed
    Pisonian conspiracy
    against Emperor
    Nero
    in 65 however, Corbulo was disgraced when his family was brought in connection to the conspirators. Corbulo himself was forced to commit
    suicide
    , while Annius Vicinianus and his brother Annius Pollio, were executed in the ensueing purges.
    [2]
    Little is known about the life of Domitia before her marriage to Domitian, but sometime before 70, Domitia was married to
    Lucius Aelius Plautius Lamia Aelianus
    , a man of
    senatorial
    rank.
    [3]
    Marriage to Domitian
    Reign of Vespasian and Titus
    The Triumph of Titus
    , by Sir
    Lawrence Alma-Tadema
    (1885). The composition alludes to the rumoured love affair between Titus (back left) and Domitia Longina (left, next to Domitian).
    [4]
    Following Nero's suicide on June 9, 68, the Roman Empire plunged into a year long
    civil war
    known as the
    Year of the Four Emperors
    , which saw the successive rise and fall of the Emperors
    Galba
    ,
    Otho
    and
    Vitellius
    . The crisis came to an end with the accession of
    Vespasian
    , who re-established peace in the Empire and founded the short-lived
    Flavian dynasty
    . In 71, Vespasian attempted to arrange a dynastic marriage between his youngest son Domitian, and the daughter of his eldest son
    Titus
    , Julia Flavia.
    [5]
    By this time however, Domitian had already met and fallen in love with Domitia Longina, and managed to persuade Lamia to divorce her, so that Domitian could marry her himself.
    [5]
    Despite its initial recklessness, the alliance was very prestigious for both families. The new marriage rehabilitated Corbulo's family, while serving the broader Flavian
    propaganda
    of the time, which sought to diminish Vespasian's political success under the less reputable emperors of the
    Julio-Claudian dynasty
    . Instead connections to Claudius and Britannicus were emphasised, and Nero's victims, or those otherwise disadvantaged by him, rehabilitated.
    [2]
    In 73, Domitia and Domitian's only attested son was born. It is not known what the boy's name was, but he died in childhood sometime between 77 and 81.
    [6]
    During this time, Domitian's role in the Flavian government was largely
    ceremonial
    . While his elder brother Titus shared almost equal powers with his father, Domitian was left with honours but no responsibilities.
    [7]
    This situation remained unchanged when Titus succeeded Vespasian as Emperor on June 23, 79, leading both ancient and modern authors to suggest a mutual animosity between the two brothers. In 80, Titus granted a
    suffect consulship
    to Domitia's former husband Aelius Lamia, according to Gsell as a personal insult against Domitian.
    [8]
    On another occasion, when Titus urged Lamia to marry again, Lamia asked whether "he too was looking for a wife".
    [9]
    After barely two years in office, Titus unexpectedly died of brain fever on September 13, 81. His last words were reported to have been: "I have made but one mistake".
    [10]
    The contemporary historian
    Suetonius
    speculated on the possible involvement of Domitian in his brother's death, attributing his final words to a popular rumour of the time, which held that Titus had carried on an affair with Domitia Longina. However even he dismisses the story as highly unlikely.
    [6]
    [10]
    On September 14, the
    Roman Senate
    confirmed Domitian as Titus' successor, granting tribunician power, the office of
    Pontifex Maximus
    , and the titles of
    Augustus
    , and
    Pater Patriae
    . Consequently, Domitia Longina became Empress of Rome.
    Empress of Rome
    Shortly following his accession as Emperor, Domitian bestowed the honorific title of
    Augusta
    upon Domitia, while their late son was
    deified
    . Both appeared on Domitian's coinage during this time. Nevertheless, the marriage appears to have faced a significant crisis in 83. For reasons unknown, Domitian briefly
    exiled
    Domitia, and then soon recalled her, either out of love or amidst rumours he was carrying on a relationship with his niece Julia Flavia.
    [11]
    According to Suetonius, Domitia was exiled because of an affair with a famous actor named
    Paris
    . When Domitian found out, he allegedly murdered Paris in the street, and promptly divorced his wife. Suetonius further adds that, once Domitia was exiled, Domitian took Julia as his mistress, who later died during a failed
    abortion
    .
    [12]
    Modern historians consider this highly implausible however, noting that many of these stories were propagated by hostile senatorial authors, who condemned Domitian as a
    tyrant
    after his death. Malicious rumours, such as those concerning Domitia's alleged infidelity, were eagerly repeated, and used to highlight the
    hypocrisy
    of a ruler publicly preaching a return to
    Augustan
    morals, while privately indulging in excesses and presiding over a corrupt
    court
    .
    [13]
    Domitian did exile his wife, but Jones argues that most likely he did so for her failure to produce an
    heir
    .
    [6]
    Nevertheless, rumours regarding Domitia's alleged misconduct with Paris circulated even in Domitian's time, and he did not take insults directed at his marriage lightly. Not long after his accession, Aelius Lamia was put to death for the joking remarks made earlier during the reign of Titus.
    [14]
    In 93, a son of
    Helvidius Priscus
    was executed for having composed a
    farce
    satirizing Domitian's separation from his wife. Stories of Domitian's affair with Julia were likely an invention of post-Domitianic writers however.
    [15]
    She died a natural death, and was subsequently deified by Domitian.
    [11]
    By 84, Domitia had returned to the palace,
    [16]
    where she lived for the remainder of Domitian's reign without incident.
    [17]
    Little is known of Domitia's precise activities as Empress, or how much influence she wielded in Domitian's government, but it seems her role was largely limited to ceremonial appearances. From Suetonius, we know that she at least accompanied the Emperor to the
    theatre
    , while the
    Jewish
    writer
    Josephus
    speaks of benefits he received from her.
    [18]
    Despite the crisis of 83, their relationship appears to have been happy. Domitian never married another woman in his life.
    Later years
    On September 18, 96, Domitian was assassinated in a palace conspiracy organized by court officials. His body was carried away on a common
    bier
    , and unceremoniously
    cremated
    by his nurse Phyllis, who mingled the ashes with those of his niece Julia at the Flavian temple.
    [19]
    The same day, he was succeeded by his friend and advisor,
    Marcus Cocceius Nerva
    . Ancient sources have implicated Domitia in the conspiracy against Domitian, either by direct involvement, or advance awareness of the assassination. The historian
    Cassius Dio
    , writing more than a century after the assassination, claimed that Domitia chanced upon a list of courtiers Domitian intended to put to death, and passed the information to his chamberlain
    Parthenius
    .
    [20]
    The story is most likely apocryphal however, with
    Herodian
    attributing a similar tale to the assassination of
    Commodus
    . According to Jones, the evidence suggests that Domitia remained devoted to Domitian, even after his death.
    [18]
    Twenty-five years after her husband's assassination, and despite the fact that his
    memory had been damned
    by the Senate, she still referred to herself as "Domitia, wife of Domitian".
    [18]
    [21]
    Sometime between 126 and 140, a temple dedicated to Domitia was erected in
    Gabii
    . She died peacefully.
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