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Research Coins: Feature Auction

 

Very Rare Desiderius from Sebrio

CNG 96, Lot: 1045. Estimate $20000.
Sold for $14000. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

LOMBARDS, Lombardy & Tuscany. Desiderius. 757-774. AV Tremissis (19mm, 1.07 g, 8h). Sebrio (Castelseprio) mint. + D•(ND)I:SIDI:RIV(Rx), cross potent / + FLAVIASI:BRIO • (pellet in O), six-rayed star with small leaves between rays. Bernareggi, Moneta, 33; Bernareggi, Sistema 177; BMC Vandals –; MEC 1 –; CNI IV 5. EF. Very rare mint.


The last of the Lombard kings to rule in Italy, Desiderius was not a member of the royal family, but an important officer in the royal court. Upon the death of his predecessor, Aistulf, Desiderius was appointed king. Like his predecessors, Desiderius hoped to expand Lombardic power in Italy, but this policy led to conflict with the papacy and the southern Italian dukedoms, including Benevento and Spoleto, all of whom had been moving closer to the Carolingian sphere of influence. Desiderius was able to exercise control over the southern dukedoms. His attempt to intervene in papal affairs was less successful; his appointee, the Antipope Philip reigned for only a single day. And to achieve a rapproachment with the Carolingians, Desiderius gave his daughter, Desiderata, in marriage to Charlemagne. The marriage lasted only briefly and Desiderata was soon returned to her father. This, combined with Desiderius’s support of Gerberga, the widow of Charlemagne’s brother, Carloman I, resulted in a war between the Carolingians and the Lombards. Desiderius was eventually defeated and forced to retire to a monastery where he died.

Originally the site of a Roman fort, Sebrio (mod. Castelseprio) was a significant Lombardic town and, for a time, mint. In 1287, the town was destroyed by Ottone Visconti, Archbishop of Milan. One building to survive was the original town’s church, known as Santa Maria foris portas (Saint Mary outside the gates) and its rare and artistically important ninth century frescoes, discovered in 1944.