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Research Coins: Electronic Auction

 
100, Lot: 128. Estimate $500.
Sold for $360. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

CN. POMPEY JUNIOR, son of Pompey the Great. 46-45 BC. AR Denarius (19mm, 3.51 gm). Spanish mint. Helmeted head of Roma right / Hispania standing right, holding shield and two spears, presenting palm to Cn. Pompey who is standing left on prow. Crawford 469/1a; CRI 48; Sydenham 1035; RSC 1 (Pompey the Great). VF, toned.

Following the battle of Thapsus in the spring of 46 BC, Julius Caesar returned to Rome to celebrate a series of triumphs. That September, Caesar set out for Spain in what would be his final campaign. Here the sons of Pompey the Great, Cnaeus and Sextus, had rallied the remains of the African forces to make one last stand against the victorius dictator. The forces met at Munda in March of 45 BC and the Pompeians were defeated, thus ending the first series of civil wars. Cnaeus was captured and executed, but Sextus escaped and survived to become a problem for the Second Triumvirate. This coin was issued by Marcus Poblicius, legatus pro praetore to Cnaeus, to pay the legions under his command in Spain.