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Septimius Severus Pautalia in Thrace Ancient Roman Coin Tripod Serpent i48350

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    Description

    Item:
    i48350
    Authentic Ancient Coin of:
    Septimius Severus
    -
    Roman Emperor
    : 193-211 A.D. -
    Bronze 15mm (3.00 grams) of
    Pautalia
    in
    Thrace
    Laureate head right.
    OVΛΠIAC ΠAVTAΛIAC, Serpent
    entwined around central leg of tripod.
    You are bidding on the exact item pictured, provided with a Certificate of Authenticity and Lifetime Guarantee of Authenticity.
    A
    sacrificial tripod
    is a three-legged piece of religious furniture used for offerings or other ritual procedures. As a seat or stand, the
    tripod
    is the most stable furniture construction for uneven ground, hence its use is universal and ancient. It is particularly associated with
    Apollo
    and the
    Delphic oracle
    in
    ancient Greece
    , and the word "tripod" comes from the Greek meaning "three-footed."
    Apollo and
    Heracles
    struggle for the Delphic tripod (
    Attic
    black-figure
    hydria
    , c. 520 BC)
    Ancient Greece
    The most famous tripod of ancient Greece was the
    Delphic
    tripod from which the
    Pythian priestess
    took her seat to deliver the
    oracles
    of the deity. The seat was formed by a circular slab on the top of the tripod, on which a branch of
    laurel
    was deposited when it was unoccupied by the priestess. In this sense, by Classical times the tripod was sacred to
    Apollo
    . The
    mytheme
    of
    Heracles
    contesting with Apollo for the tripod appears in vase-paintings older than the oldest written literature. The oracle originally may have been related to the primal deity, the Earth.
    Priestess of Delphi
    (1891), as imagined by
    John Collier
    ; the Pythia is inspired by
    pneuma
    rising from below as she sits on a tripod
    Another well-known tripod in Delphi was the
    Plataean Tripod
    ; it was made from a tenth part of the spoils taken from the
    Persian
    army after the
    Battle of Plataea
    . This consisted of a golden basin, supported by a
    bronze
    serpent
    with three heads (or three serpents intertwined), with a list of the states that had taken part in the war inscribed on the coils of the serpent. The golden bowl was carried off by the
    Phocians
    during the
    Third Sacred War
    (356–346 BC); the stand was removed by the emperor
    Constantine
    to
    Constantinople
    in 324, where in modern
    Istanbul
    it still can be seen in the
    hippodrome
    , the
    Atmeydanı
    , although in damaged condition: the heads of the serpents have disappeared, however one is now on display at the nearby Istanbul Archaeology Museums. The inscription, however, has been restored almost entirely. Such tripods usually had three
    ears
    (rings which served as handles) and frequently had a central upright as support in addition to the three legs.
    Tripods frequently are mentioned by
    Homer
    as prizes in
    athletic games
    and as complimentary gifts; in later times, highly decorated and bearing inscriptions, they served the same purpose. They also were used as dedicatory
    offerings
    to the deities, and in the dramatic contests at the
    Dionysia
    the victorious
    choregus
    (a wealthy citizen who bore the expense of equipping and training the chorus) received a crown and a tripod. He would either dedicate the tripod to some deity or set it upon the top of a marble structure erected in the form of a small circular temple in a street in
    Athens
    , called the
    street of tripods,
    from the large number of memorials of this kind. One of these, the
    Choragic Monument of Lysicrates
    , erected by him to commemorate his victory in a dramatic contest in 335 BC, still stands. The form of the victory tripod, now missing from the top of the Lysicrates monument, has been rendered variously by scholars since the 18th century.
    An ancient Greek coin c. 330-300 BC. Laureate head of Apollo (left) and ornate tripod (right).
    Martin L. West
    writes that the sibyl at Delphi shows many traits of
    shamanistic
    practices, likely inherited or influenced from Central Asian practices. He cites her sitting in a cauldron on a tripod, while making her prophecies, her being in an ecstatic trance state, similar to shamans, and her utterings, unintelligible.
    According to Herodotus (The Histories, I.144), the victory tripods were not to be taken from the temple sanctuary precinct, but left there as dedications.
    Sometimes the tripod was used as a support for a
    lebes
    or cauldron or for supporting other items such as a vase.
    Delphic tripod (
    red-figured
    bell-krater
    ,
    Paestum
    , c. 330 BC)
    Ancient China
    A
    ding
    from the late
    Shang Dynasty
    .
    Tripod pottery have been part of the archaeological assemblage in China since the earliest Neolithic cultures of
    Cishan
    and
    Peiligang
    in the 7th and 8th millennium BC. Sacrificial tripods were also found in use in ancient
    China
    usually cast in bronze but sometimes appearing in ceramic form. They are often referred to as "
    dings
    " and usually have three legs, but in some usages have four legs.
    The Chinese use sacrificial tripods in modern times, such as in 2005, when a "National Unity Tripod" made of bronze was presented by the central Chinese government to the government of northwest China's
    Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
    to mark its fiftieth birthday. It was described as a traditional Chinese sacrificial vessel symbolizing unity.
    Serpents and snakes play a role in many of the world's myths and legends. Sometimes these mythic beasts appear as ordinary snakes. At other times, they take on magical or monstrous forms. Serpents and snakes have long been associated with good as well as with evil, representing both life and death, creation and destruction.
    Serpents and Snakes as Symbols.
    In religion, mythology, and literature, serpents and snakes often stand for fertility or a creative life force—partly because the creatures can be seen as symbols of the male sex organ. They have also been associated with water and earth because many kinds of snakes live in the water or in holes in the ground. The ancient Chinese connected serpents with life-giving rain. Traditional beliefs in Australia, India, North America, and Africa have linked snakes with rainbows, which in turn are often related to rain and fertility.
    As snakes grow, many of them shed their skin at various times, revealing a shiny new skin underneath. For this reason snakes have become symbols of rebirth, transformation,
    immortality,
    and healing. The ancient Greeks considered snakes sacred to Asclepius, the god of medicine. He carried a caduceus, a staff with one or two serpents wrapped around it, which has become the symbol of modern physicians.
    For both the Greeks and the Egyptians, the snake represented eternity. Ouroboros, the Greek symbol of eternity, consisted of a snake curled into a circle or hoop, biting its own tail. The Ouroboros grew out of the belief that serpents eat themselves and are reborn from themselves in an endless cycle of destruction and creation.
    Serpents figured prominently in archaic Greek myths. According to some sources,
    Ophion
    ("serpent", a.k.a. Ophioneus), ruled the world with Eurynome before the two of them were cast down by Cronus and Rhea. The oracles of the Ancient Greeks were said to have been the continuation of the tradition begun with the worship of the Egyptian cobra goddess,
    Wadjet
    .
    The
    Minoan
    Snake Goddess
    brandished a serpent in either hand, perhaps evoking her role as source of wisdom, rather than her role as Mistress of the Animals (
    Potnia theron
    ), with a
    leopard
    under each arm. She is a Minoan version of the
    Canaanite
    fertility goddess
    Asherah
    . It is not by accident that later the infant
    Heracles
    , a liminal hero on the threshold between the old ways and the new Olympian world, also brandished the two serpents that "threatened" him in his cradle. Classical Greeks did not perceive that the threat was merely the threat of wisdom. But the gesture is the same as that of the Cretan goddess.
    Typhon
    the enemy of the Olympian gods is described as a vast grisly monster with a hundred heads and a hundred serpents issuing from his thighs, who was conquered and cast into
    Tartarus
    by
    Zeus
    , or confined beneath volcanic regions, where he is the cause of eruptions. Typhon is thus the chthonic figuration of volcanic forces. Amongst his children by Echidna are
    Cerberus
    (a monstrous three-headed dog with a snake for a tail and a serpentine mane), the serpent tailed
    Chimaera
    , the serpent-like chthonic water beast
    Lernaean Hydra
    and the hundred-headed serpentine dragon
    Ladon
    . Both the Lernaean Hydra and Ladon were slain by
    Heracles
    .
    Python
    was the earth-dragon of
    Delphi
    , she always was represented in the vase-paintings and by sculptors as a serpent. Pytho was the chthonic enemy of
    Apollo
    , who slew her and remade her former home his own oracle, the most famous in Classical Greece.
    Amphisbaena
    a Greek word, from amphis, meaning "both ways", and bainein, meaning "to go", also called the "Mother of Ants", is a mythological, ant-eating serpent with a head at each end. According to Greek mythology, the mythological amphisbaena was spawned from the blood that dripped from
    Medusa
    the
    Gorgon
    's head as
    Perseus
    flew over the Libyan Desert with her head in his hand.
    Medusa and the other Gorgons were vicious female monsters with sharp fangs and hair of living, venomous snakes whose origins predate the written myths of Greece and who were the protectors of the most ancient ritual secrets. The Gorgons wore a belt of two intertwined serpents in the same configuration of the
    caduceus
    . The Gorgon was placed at the highest point and central of the relief on the
    Parthenon
    .
    Asclepius
    , the son of Apollo and Koronis, learned the secrets of keeping death at bay after observing one serpent bringing another (which Asclepius himself had fatally wounded) healing herbs. To prevent the entire human race from becoming immortal under Asclepius's care, Zeus killed him with a bolt of lightning. Asclepius' death at the hands of Zeus illustrates man's inability to challenge the natural order that separates mortal men from the gods. In honor of Asclepius, snakes were often used in healing rituals. Non-poisonous snakes were left to crawl on the floor in dormitories where the sick and injured slept. In
    The Library
    ,
    Apollodorus
    claimed that
    Athena
    gave Asclepius a vial of blood from the Gorgons. Gorgon blood had magical properties: if taken from the left side of the Gorgon, it was a fatal poison; from the right side, the blood was capable of bringing the dead back to life. However
    Euripides
    wrote in his tragedy
    Ion
    that the Athenian queen Creusa had inherited this vial from her ancestor Erichthonios, who was a snake himself and receiving the vial from Athena. In this version the blood of Medusa had the healing power while the lethal poison originated from Medusa's serpents.
    Laocoön
    was allegedly a priest of
    Poseidon
    (or of Apollo, by some accounts) at
    Troy
    ; he was famous for warning the Trojans in vain against accepting the Trojan Horse from the Greeks, and for his subsequent divine execution. Poseidon (some say
    Athena
    ), who was supporting the Greeks, subsequently sent sea-serpents to strangle Laocoön and his two sons, Antiphantes and Thymbraeus. Another tradition states that Apollo sent the serpents for an unrelated offense, and only unlucky timing caused the Trojans to misinterpret them as punishment for striking the Horse.
    Olympias
    , the mother of
    Alexander the Great
    and a princess of the primitive land of
    Epirus
    , had the reputation of a snake-handler, and it was in serpent form that Zeus was said to have fathered Alexander upon her; tame snakes were still to be found at Macedonian
    Pella
    in the 2nd century AD (
    Lucian
    ,
    Alexander the false prophet
    ) and at
    Ostia
    a bas-relief shows paired coiled serpents flanking a dressed altar, symbols or embodiments of the
    Lares
    of the household, worthy of veneration (Veyne 1987 illus p 211).
    Aeetes
    , the king of
    Colchis
    and father of the sorceress
    Medea
    , possessed the
    Golden Fleece
    . He guarded it with a massive serpent that never slept. Medea, who had fallen in love with
    Jason
    of the
    Argonauts
    , enchanted it to sleep so Jason could seize the Fleece.
    Kyustendil
    (
    Bulgarian
    :
    Кюстендил
    , historically
    Велбъжд
    ,
    Velbazhd
    ) is a town in the far west of
    Bulgaria
    , the capital of
    Kyustendil Province
    , with a population of 58,059 (2005 census). Kyustendil is situated in the southern part of the Kyustendil Valley, 90 km southwest of
    Sofia
    . It was named after the medieval lord of the surrounding region,
    Constantine Dragaš
    .
    A
    Thracian
    settlement was founded at the place of the modern town in the
    5th
    -4th century BC and the
    Romans
    developed it into an important stronghold, balneological resort and trade junction called
    Pautalia
    in the 1st century AD.
    The
    Hisarlaka
    fortress was built in the 4th century and the town was mentioned under the
    Slavic
    name of
    Velbazhd
    (Велбъжд, meaning "camel")
    [1]
    in a 1019 charter by the
    Byzantine
    Emperor
    Basil II
    . It became a major religious and administrative centre.
    L
    ucius Septimius Severus
    (or rarely
    Severus I
    ) (April 11, 145/146-February 4, 211) was a
    Roman
    general, and
    Roman Emperor
    from April 14, 193 to 211. He was born in what is now the
    Berber
    part of Rome's historic
    Africa Province
    .
    Septimius Severus was born and raised at
    Leptis Magna
    (modern
    Berber
    , southeast of
    Carthage
    , modern
    Tunisia
    ). Severus came from a wealthy, distinguished family of
    equestrian
    rank. Severus was of
    Italian
    Roman ancestry on his mother's side and of
    Punic
    or
    Libyan
    -Punic ancestry on his father's. Little is known of his father,
    Publius Septimius Geta
    , who held no major political status but had two cousins who served as consuls under emperor
    Antoninus Pius
    . His mother, Fulvia Pia's family moved from
    Italy
    to
    North Africa
    and was of the
    Fulvius
    gens, an ancient and politically influential clan, which was originally of
    plebeian
    status. His siblings were a younger
    Publius Septimius Geta
    and Septimia Octavilla. Severus’s maternal cousin was
    Praetorian Guard
    and consul
    Gaius Fulvius Plautianus
    .
    In 172, Severus was made a
    Senator
    by the then emperor
    Marcus Aurelius
    . In 187 he married secondly
    Julia Domna
    . In 190 Severus became
    consul
    , and in the following year received from the emperor
    Commodus
    (successor to Marcus Aurelius) the command of the
    legions
    in
    Pannonia
    .
    On the murder of
    Pertinax
    by the troops in 193, they proclaimed Severus Emperor at
    Carnuntum
    , whereupon he hurried to Italy. The former emperor,
    Didius Julianus
    , was condemned to death by the Senate and killed, and Severus took possession of Rome without opposition.
    The legions of
    Syria
    , however, had proclaimed
    Pescennius Niger
    emperor. At the same time, Severus felt it was reasonable to offer
    Clodius Albinus
    , the powerful governor of Britannia who had probably supported Didius against him, the rank of Caesar, which implied some claim to succession. With his rearguard safe, he moved to the East and crushed Niger's forces at the
    Battle of Issus
    . The following year was devoted to suppressing Mesopotamia and other Parthian vassals who had backed Niger. When afterwards Severus declared openly his son
    Caracalla
    as successor, Albinus was hailed emperor by his troops and moved to Gallia. Severus, after a short stay in Rome, moved northwards to meet him. On
    February 19
    ,
    197
    , in the
    Battle of Lugdunum
    , with an army of 100,000 men, mostly composed of
    Illyrian
    ,
    Moesian
    and
    Dacian
    legions, Severus defeated and killed Clodius Albinus, securing his full control over the Empire.
    Emperor
    Severus was at heart a
    soldier
    , and sought glory through military exploits. In 197 he waged a brief and successful war against the
    Parthian Empire
    in retaliation for the support given to Pescennius Niger. The Parthian capital
    Ctesiphon
    was sacked by the legions, and the northern half of
    Mesopotamia
    was restored to Rome.
    His relations with the
    Roman Senate
    were never good. He was unpopular with them from the outset, having seized power with the help of the military, and he returned the sentiment. Severus ordered the execution of dozens of Senators on charges of corruption and
    conspiracy
    against him, replacing them with his own favorites.
    He also disbanded the
    Praetorian Guard
    and replaced it with one of his own, made up of 50,000 loyal soldiers mainly camped at
    Albanum
    , near Rome (also probably to grant the emperor a kind of centralized reserve). During his reign the number of legions was also increased from 25/30 to 33. He also increased the number of auxiliary corps (
    numerii
    ), many of these troops coming from the Eastern borders. Additionally the annual wage for a soldier was raised from 300 to 500
    denarii
    .
    Although his actions turned Rome into a military
    dictatorship
    , he was popular with the citizens of Rome, having stamped out the rampant corruption of Commodus's reign. When he returned from his victory over the Parthians, he erected the
    Arch of Septimius Severus
    in Rome.
    According to Cassius Dio, however, after 197 Severus fell heavily under the influence of his Praetorian Prefect,
    Gaius Fulvius Plautianus
    , who came to have almost total control of most branches of the imperial administration. Plautianus's daughter,
    Fulvia Plautilla
    , was married to Severus's son, Caracalla. Plautianus’s excessive power came to an end in 205, when he was denounced by the Emperor's dying brother and killed. The two following
    praefecti
    , including the jurist
    Aemilius Papinianus
    , received however even larger powers.
    Campaigns in Caledonia (Scotland)
    Starting from 208 Severus undertook a number of military actions in
    Roman Britain
    , reconstructing
    Hadrian's Wall
    and campaigning in
    Scotland
    .
    He reached the area of the
    Moray Firth
    in his last campaign in Caledonia, as was called Scotland by the Romans.. In 210 obtained a peace with the
    Picts
    that lasted practically until the final withdrawal of the Roman legions from Britain, before falling severely ill in
    Eboracum
    (
    York
    ).
    Death
    He is famously said to have given the advice to his sons: "Be harmonious, enrich the soldiers, and scorn all other men" before he died at Eboracum on
    February 4
    ,
    211
    . Upon his death in 211, Severus was
    deified
    by the Senate and succeeded by his sons,
    Caracalla
    and
    Geta
    , who were advised by his wife
    Julia Domna
    . The stability Severus provided the Empire was soon gone under their reign.
    Accomplishments and Record
    Though his military expenditure was costly to the empire, Severus was the strong, able ruler that Rome needed at the time. He began a tradition of effective emperors elevated solely by the military. His policy of an expanded and better-rewarded army was criticized by his contemporary
    Dio Cassius
    and
    Herodianus
    : in particular, they pointed out the increasing burden (in the form of taxes and services) the civilian population had to bear to maintain the new army.
    Severus was also distinguished for his buildings. Apart from the triumphal arch in the Roman Forum carrying his full name, he also built the
    Septizodium
    in Rome and enriched greatly his native city of
    Leptis Magna
    (including another triumphal arch on the occasion of his visit of 203).
    Severus and Christianity
    Christians were
    persecuted
    during the reign of Septimus Severus. Severus allowed the enforcement of policies already long-established, which meant that Roman authorities did not intentionally seek out Christians, but when people were accused of being Christians they could either curse
    Jesus
    and make an offering to
    Roman gods
    , or be executed. Furthermore, wishing to strengthen the peace by encouraging religious harmony through
    syncretism
    , Severus tried to limit the spread of the two quarrelsome groups who refused to yield to syncretism by outlawing
    conversion
    to Christianity or
    Judaism
    . Individual officials availed themselves of the laws to proceed with rigor against the Christians. Naturally the emperor, with his strict conception of law, did not hinder such partial persecution, which took place in
    Egypt
    and the
    Thebaid
    , as well as in
    Africa proconsularis
    and the East. Christian
    martyrs
    were numerous in
    Alexandria
    (cf.
    Clement of Alexandria
    ,
    Stromata
    , ii. 20;
    Eusebius
    ,
    Church History
    , V., xxvi., VI., i.). No less severe were the persecutions in Africa, which seem to have begun in 197 or 198 (cf.
    Tertullian's
    Ad martyres
    ), and included the Christians known in the
    Roman martyrology
    as the martyrs of
    Madaura
    . Probably in 202 or 203
    Felicitas
    and
    Perpetua
    suffered for their faith. Persecution again raged for a short time under the proconsul
    Scapula
    in 211, especially in
    Numidia
    and
    Mauritania
    . Later accounts of a
    Gallic
    persecution, especially at
    Lyon
    , are legendary. In general it may thus be said that the position of the Christians under Septimius Severus was the same as under the
    Antonines
    ; but the law of this Emperor at least shows clearly that the
    rescript
    of
    Trajan
    [
    clarification needed
    ]
    had failed to execute its purpose.
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