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Research Coins: Feature Auction

 
Triton XVIII, Lot: 1339. Estimate $7500.
Sold for $9000. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

Irene. 797-802. AV Solidus (20mm, 4.45 g, 6h). Constantinople mint. ЄIPIҺH ЬASILISSH, crowned facing bust of Irene, wearing loros, holding globus cruciger in right hand, cruciform scepter in left / ЄIPIҺH ЬASILISSH, crowned facing bust of Irene, wearing loros, holding globus cruciger in right hand, cruciform scepter in left; • at beginning of legend, X at end. DOC 1c; Füeg 2.A; SB 1599. EF, toned, slightly irregular edge.


From the Collection of the MoneyMuseum, Zurich. Ex Numismatica Ars Classica 29 (11 May 2005), lot 711.

The powerful personality of Irene had always overshadowed that of her son Constantine, and only an army mutiny had prevented her from taking power in 790. After a short period in exile, she returned to Constantinople, and began plans to eliminate her enemies. As the coinage shows, she quickly relegated her son to second place. By 797, she had discredited Constantine to the point that she could have him deposed, blinded, and murdered with little outcry. A conspiracy of the patricians led to her being deposed in 802. She was exiled to Lesbos, where she died the following year.