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Electronic Auction 482

Lot nuber 359

The Triumvirs. Octavian. Autumn 31-summer 30 BC. AR Denarius (18.5mm, 3.34 g, 6h). Italian (Rome?) mint.


Electronic Auction 482
Lot: 359.
 Estimated: $ 200

Roman Republican, Silver

Sold For $ 350. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

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The Triumvirs. Octavian. Autumn 31-summer 30 BC. AR Denarius (18.5mm, 3.34 g, 6h). Italian (Rome?) mint. Bare head of Octavian left / Victory standing left on globe, holding wreath and palm frond. CRI 407; RIC I 254b; RSC 64. Toned, light scratches and porosity, edge defect, area of weak strike on reverse. Near VF.

Following his victory at Actium, Octavian ordered a golden statue of Victory, standing on a globe and holding a wreath and palm frond, to be set up on an altar in the Curia in Rome. This statue had been captured by the Romans from Pyrrhus in 272 BC, and it assumed a somewhat tutelary mystique, protecting the Roman state from dissolution. In AD 382, the emperor Gratian ordered its removal. Two years later, the senator and orator Symmachus urged Valentinian II to replace it, a request that was met with stiff opposition from the bishop of Milan, Ambrose. Though it was briefly returned to its place by the usurper Eugenius, it was again removed following his defeat. Petitions to Theodosius I for its subsequent replacement were refused, on the grounds that the once-important symbol of the gods’ blessing on the Roman Empire was now nothing more than a piece of paganism. To the remaining Pagans, the fall of Rome to Alaric’s Visigoths in AD 410 confirmed that the statue’s removal had stripped Rome of its protection by the old gods.

Closing Date and Time: 16 December 2020 at 11:59:20 ET.

All winning bids are subject to an 18% buyer’s fee.