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PHILIP I the ARAB 244AD Sestertius Bull Lion Legions Ancient Greek Coin i44467

$ 73.28

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    Description

    Item:
    i44467
    Authentic Ancient Coin of:
    Philip I 'the Arab'
    -
    Roman Emperor
    : 244-249 A.D. -
    Bronze 'Sestertius' 27mm (19.62 grams) from Year 5 of the founding of
    Viminacium
    = ANV = 243/4 A.D.
    IMP M IVL PHILIPPVS AVG, laureate, draped & curiassed bust right.
    P M S COL VIM, Moesia standing left between
    bull
    &
    lion
    , AN V in ex.
    You are bidding on the exact item pictured, provided with a Certificate of Authenticity and Lifetime Guarantee of Authenticity.
    Legio septima
    Claudia Pia Fidelis
    (
    Seventh
    Claudian
    Legion
    ) was a
    Roman legion
    . Its emblem, as well as of all Caesar's legions, was the bull, together with the lion.
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    The 7th, along with the
    6th
    ,
    8th
    &
    9th
    were all founded by Pompey in Spain in 65 BC. They were ordered to
    Cisalpine Gaul
    around 58 BC by
    Julius Caesar
    , and marched with him throughout the entire Gallic Wars.
    Legio VII was one of the two legions used in
    Caesar's invasions of Britain
    , and played a crucial role in The
    Battle of Pharsalus
    in 48 BC, and it existed at least until the end of the 4th century, guarding middle
    Danube
    .
    Tiberius Claudius Maximus
    the Roman soldier who brought the head of
    Decebalus
    to emperor
    Trajan
    was serving in Legio VII Claudia.
    Map of the Roman empire in AD 125, under emperor
    Hadrian
    Legio VII Claudia
    , stationed on the river
    Danube
    at
    Viminacium
    (Kostolac, Serbia), in
    Moesia Superior
    province, from AD 58 until the 4th century
    Viminacium
    (
    VIMINACIVM
    ) was a major city (provincial capital) and military camp of the
    Roman
    province of
    Moesia
    (today's
    Serbia
    ), and the capital of
    Moesia Superior
    . The site is located 12 km from the modern town of
    Kostolac
    in Eastern Serbia. The city dates back to the 1st century AD, and at its peak it is believed to have had 40.000 inhabitants, making it one of the biggest cities of that time. It lies on the Roman road
    Via Militaris
    . Viminacium was devastated by
    Huns
    in the 5th century, but was later rebuilt by
    Justinian
    . It was completely destroyed with the
    arrival
    of
    Slavs
    in the 6th century. Today, the archeological site occupies a total of 450 hectares, and contains remains of temples, streets, squares, amphitheatres, palaces, hippodromes and Roman baths.
    History
    A XXV the scene of the
    Trajan's Column
    , which may have been accounted for "headquarters" of the Roman Emperor: Viminacium.
    The remains of Viminacium, the capital of the Roman province of
    Moesia Superior
    , are located on territories of the villages of Stari Kostolac and Drmno, about 12 km from the town of
    Kostolac
    and about 90 miles southeast of
    Belgrade
    . Viminacium was one of the most important Roman cities and military camps in the period from 1st to 4th centuries. Its exceptional strategic importance was reflected both in the defense of the northern border of the Roman empire and in turn of communications and commercial transactions. No less appealing to the Romans was the hinterland of the
    Mlava
    river valley, which is rich in ore and grains. In Roman times, the town on the northern side of relying directly on the branch of the
    Danube
    , while the western side, touching the walls Mlava rivers. Only in the later period, Viminacium spread to the left bank of Mlava. Thanks to the location, land and waterways, Viminacium represented one of those areas where the encounter of cultures between East and West was inevitable. Although these roads were the primary military and strategic function, they are taking place throughout antiquity very lively traffic and certainly contributed to the very Viminacium become prosperous and an important trading and business headquarters. In Viminacium,
    Roman legion VII Claudia
    was stationed, and a nearby civilian settlement emerged from the military camp. In 117 during the reign of
    Hadrian
    it received city status. In the camp, 6.000 soldiers were stationed, and 30-40.000 lived nearby. In the first half of the 3rd century the city was in full development, as evidenced by the fact that at that time it acquired the status of a Roman colony, and the right to coin local money. Here, in 211,
    Septimius Severus
    was proclaimed emperor by his son
    Caracalla
    . In the mausoleum and the excavated tombs, the Roman emperor
    Hostilian
    , who died in 251, was buried.
    A legion may have been stationed here as early as Augustus (27 BC-14 AD). In 33/34 AD a road was built, linking Viminacium and
    Ratiaria
    .
    Claudius
    (41-54) garrisoned Viminacium,
    Oescus
    and
    Novae
    as camps for the Moesian legions.
    The first legion attested at Viminacium was the VII Claudia that came from Dalmatia in 52 AD .
    Emperor Trajan
    (98-117) was headquartered here during the
    Dacian Wars
    . It became a
    colonia
    with minting privilege in 239 AD during the rule of
    Gordian III
    (238-244) and housed the Legion VII and Legion IV.
    Emperor
    Hostilian
    was the son of the emperor
    Decius
    , who was killed in the ambush near the ancient city of Abrutus located in present day Bulgaria. According to the old manuscript, emperor Hostilian and his mother came to Viminacium to supervise the organization of defense of northern borders, but both of them died of the plague. Because of the distance and the fear of spreading the plague, he was buried with all honors in Viminacium
    Viminacium was the provincial capital of
    Moesia Superior
    . In the late spring of 293-294,
    Diocletian
    journeyed through his realm and he re-organized Viminacium as the capital of the new province of
    Moesia Superior Margensis
    . He registered that the people wrote in Latin, as opposed to Greek in the southern provinces. Viminacium was the base camp of
    Claudia
    Legio VII
    , and hosted for some time the
    Flavia Felix
    IIII
    . It had a Roman amphitheatre with room for 12,000 people.
    In 382 the city was the meeting place between
    Theodosius
    and
    Gratian
    amidst the
    Gothic Wars
    .
    Viminacium was destroyed in 441 by the
    Attila the Hun
    , but rebuilt by
    Justinian I
    . During
    Maurice's Balkan campaigns
    , Viminacium saw destruction by the
    Avars
    in 582 and a
    crushing defeat
    of Avar forces on the northern Danube bank in 599, destroying Avar reputation for invincibility.
    [3]
    Location and excavation
    Valerian
    AD 253-260. AR Antoninianus. Viminacium mint. 1st emission, 1st phase, AD 253.
    Viminacium is located in
    Stari Kostolac
    (Old
    Kostolac
    ) a
    Serbian
    town on the
    Danube
    river, east of
    Belgrade
    . Viminacium is the location of the first archaeological excavation in Serbia, which started in 1882, by
    Mihailo Valtrović
    , an architect by profession and the first professor of archeology at the college in
    Belgrade
    . The only help he received was from 12 prisoners, because the state did not have enough resources to provide him with a better work force. His research was continued by
    Miloje Vasić
    , in the 1970s
    [
    clarification needed
    ]
    . It has intensified in the last ten years in the area of the Roman city of the Roman legionary camps and cemeteries. Many studies suggest that the military camp at Viminacium had a rectangular plan, measuring 442 x 385 meters, and that is not far from its western wall of civilian settlement in an area of approximately 72 acres. Legionary camp in Viminacium is now in a layer of arable land, so that wealth Viminacium easily accessible to researchers, but, unfortunately, and the robbers.The National Museum in
    Belgrade
    and
    Požarevac
    kept some 40,000 items found in Viminacium, of which over 700 made of gold and silver. Among them are many objects that represent the European and world rarities invaluable.
    It has been discovered and more than 13,500 graves. Tombstones and sarcophagi are often decorated with relief representations of scenes from mythology or daily life. We have found numerous grave masonry construction. Especially interesting are the frescoes of the 4th-century tombs.
    Fresco
    with the notion of young women in artistic value of the extreme range of late antique art. During the excavation, an amphitheater, which with its 12,000 seats was one of the largest in the
    Balkans
    .
    Today
    Kostolac
    , a small
    Serbian
    town on the
    Danube
    river, is located where Viminacium used to be.
    Marcus Julius Philippus
    or
    Philippus I Arabs
    (c. 204–249), known in
    English
    as
    Philip the Arab
    or formerly (prior to World War II) in English as
    Philip the Arabian
    , was a
    Roman Emperor
    from 244 to 249.
    //
    Early life
    Little is known about Philip's early life and political career. He was born in
    Shahba
    , about 55 miles southeast of
    Damascus
    , in the
    Roman province
    of
    Syria
    . Philip has the nickname "the Arab" because he had family who had originated in the
    Arabian peninsula
    , believed to be distant descendants of the prestigious Baleed family of
    Aleppo
    . Philip was the son of a Julius Marinus, a local Roman citizen, possibly of some importance. Many historians
    [1]
    [2]
    [3]
    agree that he was of Arab descent who gained
    Roman citizenship
    through his father, a man of considerable influence. Many citizens from the provinces took Roman names upon acquiring citizenship. This makes tracing his Arabic blood line difficult. However, it is documented that Rome used the
    Ghassan
    tribe from the
    Azd
    of
    Yemen
    as vassals to keep the neighboring northern Arabs in check.
    The name of Philip's mother is unknown, but sources refer to a brother,
    Gaius Julius Priscus
    , a member of the
    Praetorian guard
    under
    Gordian III
    (238–244). In 234, Philip married
    Marcia Otacilia Severa
    , daughter of a Roman Governor. They had two children: a son named Marcus Julius Philippus Severus (
    Philippus II
    ) in 238 and according to numismatic evidence they had a daughter called Julia Severa or Severina, whom the ancient Roman sources don't mention.
    Philip became a member of the
    Pretorian Guard
    during the reign of the emperor
    Alexander Severus
    , who was a Syrian. In ancient Rome the Pretorian Guard was closely associated with the emperor, serving among other things as the emperor's bodyguard.
    Political career
    In 243, during
    Gordian III
    's campaign against
    Shapur I
    of Persia, the
    Praetorian prefect
    Timesitheus
    died under unclear circumstances. At the suggestion of his brother Priscus, Philip became the new Praetorian prefect, with the intention that the two brothers would control the young Emperor and rule the Roman world as unofficial regents. Following a military defeat, Gordian III died in 244 under circumstances that are still debated. While some claim that Philip conspired in his murder, other accounts (including one coming from the Persian point of view) state that Gordian died in battle. Whatever the case, Philip assumed the purple following Gordian's death. According to Edward Gibbon:
    His rise from so obscure a station to the first dignities of the empire seems to prove that he was a bold and able leader. But his boldness prompted him to aspire to the throne, and his abilities were employed to supplant, not to serve, his indulgent master.
    Philip was not willing to repeat the mistakes of previous claimants, and was aware that he had to return to
    Rome
    in order to secure his position with the
    senate
    . He thus travelled west, after concluding a peace treaty with Shapur I, and left his brother Priscus as extraordinary ruler of the Eastern provinces. In Rome he was confirmed
    Augustus
    , and nominated his young son
    Caesar
    and heir.
    Philip's rule started with yet another
    Germanic
    incursion on the provinces of
    Pannonia
    and the
    Goths
    invaded
    Moesia
    (modern-day
    Serbia
    and
    Bulgaria
    ) in the
    Danube
    frontier. They were finally defeated in the year 248, but the
    legions
    were not satisfied with the result, probably due to a low share of the plunder, if any. Rebellion soon arose and
    Tiberius Claudius Pacatianus
    was proclaimed emperor by the troops. The uprising was crushed and Philip nominated
    Gaius Messius Quintus Decius
    as governor of the province. Future events would prove this to be a mistake. Pacatianus' revolt was not the only threat to his rule: in the East,
    Marcus Jotapianus
    led another uprising in response to the oppressive rule of
    Priscus
    and the excessive taxation of the Eastern provinces. Two other usurpers,
    Marcus Silbannacus
    and
    Sponsianus
    , are reported to have started rebellions without much success.
    In April
    A.D.
    248 (April 1000
    A.U.C.
    ), Philip had the honour of leading the celebrations of the one thousandth birthday of Rome, which according to tradition was
    founded
    in 753 BC by
    Romulus
    . He combined the anniversary with the celebration of Rome's alleged tenth
    saeculum
    . According to contemporary accounts, the festivities were magnificent and included spectacular games,
    ludi saeculares
    , and theatrical presentations throughout the city. In the coliseum, more than 1,000 gladiators were killed along with hundreds of exotic animals including hippos, leopards, lions, giraffes, and one rhinoceros. The events were also celebrated in literature, with several publications, including
    Asinius Quadratus
    's
    History of a Thousand Years
    , specially prepared for the anniversary.
    Despite the festive atmosphere, discontent in the legions was growing.
    Decius
    (249–251) was proclaimed Emperor by the Danubian armies in the spring of 249 and immediately marched to Rome. Philip's army met the usurper near modern
    Verona
    that summer. Decius won the battle and Philip was killed sometime in September 249, either in the fighting or assassinated by his own soldiers who were eager to please the new ruler. Philip's eleven-year-old son and heir may have been killed with his father and Priscus disappeared without a trace.
    Religious beliefs
    Further information:
    Philip the Arab and Christianity
    Some later traditions, first mentioned in the historian
    Eusebius
    in his
    Ecclesiastical History
    , held that Philip was the first
    Christian
    Roman emperor. This tradition seems to be based on reports in Eusebius that Philip allegedly had once entered a Christian service on Easter, after having been required by a bishop to confess his sins. Later versions located this event in Antioch.
    However, historians generally identify the later Emperor Constantine, baptised on his deathbed, as the first Christian emperor, and generally describe Philip's adherence to Christianity as dubious, because non-Christian writers do not mention the fact, and because throughout his reign, Philip to all appearances (coinage, etc.) continued to follow the
    state religion
    . Critics ascribe Eusebius' claim as probably due to the tolerance Philip showed towards Christians.
    Saint Quirinus of Rome
    was, according to a legendary account, the son of Philip the Arab.
    The
    sestertius
    , or
    sesterce
    , (pl. sestertii) was an
    ancient Roman
    coin
    . During the
    Roman Republic
    it was a small,
    silver
    coin issued only on rare occasions. During the
    Roman Empire
    it was a large
    brass
    coin.
    Helmed Roma head right, IIS behind
    Dioscuri
    riding right, ROMA in linear frame below. RSC4, C44/7, BMC13.
    The name
    sestertius
    (originally
    semis-tertius
    ) means "2 ½", the coin's original value in
    asses
    , and is a combination of
    semis
    "half" and
    tertius
    "third", that is, "the third half" (0 ½ being
    the first half
    and 1 ½
    the second half
    ) or "half the third" (two units plus
    half the third
    unit, or
    half
    way between the second unit and
    the third
    ). Parallel constructions exist in
    Danish
    with
    halvanden
    (1 ½),
    halvtredje
    (2 ½) and
    halvfjerde
    (3 ½). The form
    sesterce
    , derived from
    French
    , was once used in preference to the Latin form, but is now considered old-fashioned.
    It is abbreviated as  (originally
    IIS
    ).
    Example of a detailed portrait of
    Hadrian
    117 to 138
    History
    The sestertius was introduced c. 211 BC as a small
    silver
    coin valued at one-quarter of a
    denarius
    (and thus one hundredth of an
    aureus
    ). A silver denarius was supposed to weigh about 4.5 grams, valued at ten grams, with the silver sestertius valued at two and one-half grams. In practice, the coins were usually underweight.
    When the denarius was retariffed to sixteen asses (due to the gradual reduction in the size of bronze denominations), the sestertius was accordingly revalued to four asses, still equal to one quarter of a denarius. It was produced sporadically, far less often than the denarius, through 44 BC.
    Hostilian
    under
    Trajan Decius
    250 AD
    In or about 23 BC, with the coinage reform of
    Augustus
    , the denomination of sestertius was introduced as the large brass denomination. Augustus tariffed the value of the sestertius as 1/100
    Aureus
    . The sestertius was produced as the largest
    brass
    denomination until the late 3rd century AD. Most were struck in the mint of
    Rome
    but from AD 64 during the reign of
    Nero
    (AD 54–68) and
    Vespasian
    (AD 69–79), the mint of
    Lyon
    (
    Lugdunum
    ), supplemented production. Lyon sestertii can be recognised by a small globe, or legend stop), beneath the bust.
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    The brass sestertius typically weighs in the region of 25 to 28 grammes, is around 32–34 mm in diameter and about 4 mm thick. The distinction between
    bronze
    and brass was important to the Romans. Their name for
    brass
    was
    orichalcum
    , a word sometimes also spelled
    aurichalcum
    (echoing the word for a gold coin, aureus), meaning 'gold-copper', because of its shiny, gold-like appearance when the coins were newly struck (see, for example
    Pliny the Elder
    in his
    Natural History
    Book 34.4).
    Orichalcum
    was considered, by weight, to be worth about double that of bronze. This is why the half-sestertius, the
    dupondius
    , was around the same size and weight as the bronze as, but was worth two asses.
    Sestertii continued to be struck until the late 3rd century, although there was a marked deterioration in the quality of the metal used and the striking even though portraiture remained strong. Later emperors increasingly relied on melting down older sestertii, a process which led to the zinc component being gradually lost as it burned off in the high temperatures needed to melt copper (
    Zinc
    melts at 419 °C,
    Copper
    at 1085 °C). The shortfall was made up with bronze and even lead. Later sestertii tend to be darker in appearance as a result and are made from more crudely prepared blanks (see the
    Hostilian
    coin on this page).
    The gradual impact of
    inflation
    caused by
    debasement
    of the silver currency meant that the purchasing power of the sestertius and smaller denominations like the dupondius and as was steadily reduced. In the 1st century AD, everyday small change was dominated by the dupondius and as, but in the 2nd century, as inflation bit, the sestertius became the dominant small change. In the 3rd century silver coinage contained less and less silver, and more and more copper or bronze. By the 260s and 270s the main unit was the double-denarius, the
    antoninianus
    , but by then these small coins were almost all bronze. Although these coins were theoretically worth eight sestertii, the average sestertius was worth far more in plain terms of the metal they contained.
    Some of the last sestertii were struck by
    Aurelian
    (270–275 AD). During the end of its issue, when sestertii were reduced in size and quality, the
    double sestertius
    was issued first by
    Trajan Decius
    (249–251 AD) and later in large quantity by the ruler of a breakaway regime in the West called
    Postumus
    (259–268 AD), who often used worn old sestertii to
    overstrike
    his image and legends on. The double sestertius was distinguished from the sestertius by the
    radiate crown
    worn by the emperor, a device used to distinguish the dupondius from the as and the antoninianus from the denarius.
    Eventually, the inevitable happened. Many sestertii were withdrawn by the state and by forgers, to melt down to make the debased antoninianus, which made inflation worse. In the coinage reforms of the 4th century, the sestertius played no part and passed into history.
    Sestertius of
    Hadrian
    , dupondius of
    Antoninus Pius
    , and as of
    Marcus Aurelius
    As a unit of account
    The sestertius was also used as a standard unit of account, represented on inscriptions with the monogram HS. Large values were recorded in terms of
    sestertium milia
    , thousands of sestertii, with the
    milia
    often omitted and implied. The hyper-wealthy general and politician of the late Roman Republic,
    Crassus
    (who fought in the war to defeat
    Spartacus
    ), was said by Pliny the Elder to have had 'estates worth 200 million sesterces'.
    A loaf of bread cost roughly half a sestertius, and a
    sextarius
    (~0.5 liter) of
    wine
    anywhere from less than half to more than 1 sestertius. One
    modius
    (6.67 kg) of
    wheat
    in 79 AD
    Pompeii
    cost 7 sestertii, of
    rye
    3 sestertii, a bucket 2 sestertii, a tunic 15 sestertii, a donkey 500 sestertii.
    Records from
    Pompeii
    show a
    slave
    being sold at auction for 6,252 sestertii. A writing tablet from
    Londinium
    (Roman
    London
    ), dated to c. 75–125 AD, records the sale of a
    Gallic
    slave girl called Fortunata for 600 denarii, equal to 2,400 sestertii, to a man called Vegetus. It is difficult to make any comparisons with modern coinage or prices, but for most of the 1st century AD the ordinary
    legionary
    was paid 900 sestertii per annum, rising to 1,200 under
    Domitian
    (81-96 AD), the equivalent of 3.3 sestertii per day. Half of this was deducted for living costs, leaving the soldier (if he was lucky enough actually to get paid) with about 1.65 sestertii per day.
    Perhaps a more useful comparison is a modern salary: in 2010 a private soldier in the US Army (grade E-2) earned about ,000 a year.
    Numismatic value
    A sestertius of
    Nero
    , struck at
    Rome
    in 64 AD. The reverse depicts the emperor on horseback with a companion. The legend reads DECVRSIO, 'a military exercise'. Diameter 35mm
    Sestertii are highly valued by
    numismatists
    , since their large size gave
    caelatores
    (engravers) a large area in which to produce detailed portraits and reverse types. The most celebrated are those produced for
    Nero
    (54-68 AD) between the years 64 and 68 AD, created by some of the most accomplished coin engravers in history. The brutally realistic portraits of this emperor, and the elegant reverse designs, greatly impressed and influenced the artists of the
    Renaissance
    . The series issued by
    Hadrian
    (117-138 AD), recording his travels around the Roman Empire, brilliantly depicts the Empire at its height, and included the first representation on a coin of the figure of
    Britannia
    ; it was revived by
    Charles II
    , and was a feature of
    United Kingdom
    coinage until the
    2008 redesign
    .
    Very high quality examples can sell for over a million
    dollars
    at auction as of 2008, but the coins were produced in such colossal abundance that millions survive.
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