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Research Coins: Feature Auction

 

Resolve of Roman Allies

Triton XIX, Lot: 2179. Estimate $15000.
Sold for $31500. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

Anonymous. Circa 225-212 BC. AV Stater (18.5mm, 6.85 g, 6h). Rome mint. Laureate, janiform head of Dioscuri / Oath-taking scene: youth kneeling left, head right, holding a pig between two warriors, one Roman and the other representing the Italian allies, standing facing each other, holding spears and touching with their swords a sacrificial pig held by a youth kneeling left; ROMA in exergue. Crawford 28/1; Sydenham 69; Bahrfeldt 1; Biaggi 1; RBW 61. VF, scrapes on obverse, bruises, traces of earthen deposits, edge tests. Very rare.


From the collection of Dr. Lawrence A. Adams. Ex UBS 45 (15 September 1998), lot 370, purchased from J. Schulman, 29 September 1919.

This, the first gold coinage of the Roman Republic, was minted at a time of national crisis. In 218 BC, Hannibal, the Carthaginian leader in Spain, led his army across the Alps and invaded northern Italy, thus beginning the Second Punic War. The invader won a series of brilliant victories culminating in the battle of Cannae, in 216 BC, in which the Romans are said to have lost 70,000 men. Gold staters and half staters were struck at this time having as their obverse type a beardless janiform head perhaps representing the Dioscuri, the gods who gave special protection to the Romans on the field of battle. The attractive reverse type shows an oath-taking scene, the clear intention being to strengthen the resolve of Rome's allies in the face of Hannibal's intimidating presence.