Jump to content

Uranius Antoninus, 253 – 254


Constantivs

Recommended Posts

Well I learned something today... but I think I will lay off on my bid this time... $80K starting bid ..lol

 

If you're willing to bid.. well here you go.. and here is the link ..and the very interesting write up:

https://www.biddr.com/auctions/nac/browse?a=3004&l=3384501

 

image.png.ee078fdc8ffe7609cec20ccddfdedf04.png

 

The below text from:

image.png.d19382f5cab1cdfc956670fe8d7b61dd.png

Uranius Antoninus, 253 – 254
Aureus, Emesa 253-254, AV 5.84 g. L IVL AVR SVLP VRA ANTONINVS Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust r. Rev. FE – CVND – ITAS AVG Fortuna standing l., holding rudder and cornucopia. C 3. RIC 3a. Baldus, Uranius Antoninus, 66 (this coin illustrated). Mazzini 3 (this coin). R. Delbrueck, Uranius at Emesa, NC 1948, p. 17, 8-9 (these dies). Calicó 3385 (these dies).
Extremely rare and in exceptional condition for the issue, undoubtedly among the finest
specimens known. A very interesting portrait perfectly struck in high relief.
Virtually as struck and almost Fdc

Ex NAC 2, 1990, 783 and Leu 93, 2005, Perfectionist, 95 sales. From the Mazzini collection and from the Homs hoard.
Uranius Antoninus, the hereditary priest of Aphrodite and the sun-god El-Gabal in Emesa, was hailed emperor in the midst of a Sasanian invasion of Roman territories. His extraordinary coinage includes imperial-style aurei (and very rare denarii struck from aureus dies) and three types of provincial-style coinage, and can be dated to 253/4 due to the fortunate use of a Seleucid Era date on a provincial bronze. All of his aurei bear Latin inscriptions, and since they do not display any imperial titles they are able to record (in abbreviated form) his full name, Lucius Julius Aurelius Sulpicius Uranius Antoninus. By contrast, his provincial coins have Greek inscriptions that bear the Greek versions of the titles imperator and Augustus, and generally provide him only with the name Sulpicius Antoninus. His aurei were struck at a heavy standard for the period – something between 55 and 60 per Roman pound. His contemporaries lagged far behind: Trebonianus Gallus (251-253) struck aurei at 1/90th of a pound, and even in their accession year of 253/254, when aurei of Valerian and Gallienus were struck at the heaviest standard of their reigns, they were only 1/70th of a pound. Since Uranius Antoninus' silver 'tetradrachms' are about 90 percent pure and weigh about eight grams they likely were valued at ten per aureus. The aurei bear an interesting array of reverse types, some distinctive and others which are borrowed from imperial coins that would have been found in circulation. Others, instead, refer to local religion and reflect the close link between Principi Sacerdotes of Emesa and the great local god Elagabal, or the Baal of Emesa.
Graded MS* Strike 5/5 Surface 4/5, NGC certification number 6556714-033

Edited by Constantivs
  • Like 5
  • Gasp 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...