-40%

AURELIAN SILVER/BILLON ANTONINIANUS____Outstanding General_____JUPITER / GLOBE

$ 0.68

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Certification: Uncertified
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Ruler: Aurelian
  • Denomination: Antoninianus
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Composition: Billon
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Item must be returned within: 60 Days
  • Year: 270 AD

    Description

    20V22
    FRASCATIUS ANCIENTS
    A BEAUTIFUL SILVER / BILLON ANTONINIANUS OF EMPEROR AURELIAN (Lucius Domitius Aurelianus Augustus) FROM 270 - 275 AD .
    Aurelian was considered to be an outstanding general and a severe and uncompromising administrator.
    Aurelian was murdered by a group of officers who had allegedly been misled by his secretary into believing themselves marked for execution.
    THE SIZE IS 21.3 MM AND 3.52 GRAMS.
    Sear 11542
    OBVERSE – AVRELIANVS AVG Radiate and cuirassed bust right.
    REVERSE – IOVI CONSER Aurelian standing right, receiving globe from Jupiter standing left, holding sceptre
    Aurelian, (Lucius Domitius Aurelianus) was Roman emperor from 270 to 275 AD. By reuniting the empire, which had virtually disintegrated under the pressure of invasions and internal revolts, he earned his self-adopted title restitutor orbis (“restorer of the world”).
    Aurelian, born near the Danube River, had established himself as an army officer when, about 260, from outside pressure and internal fragmentation of authority, the frontiers of the empire suddenly collapsed. With his compatriot Claudius, Aurelian led the cavalry of the emperor Gallienus (253–268), and, upon Gallienus’s assassination in 268, Claudius became emperor. The new ruler quickly suppressed the rebellion of the usurper Aureolus, but, after a reign of 18 months, Claudius died. His brother Quintillus, who ruled about three months, died or was killed, and in September 270 Aurelian succeeded as emperor.
    Aurelian quickly set about restoring Roman authority in Europe. He turned back the Vandals from Pannonia (in present-day central Europe) and after a series of battles expelled the Alemanni and Juthungi from northern Italy and chased the Juthungi across the Danube. Returning to Rome, he quelled a revolt at the imperial mint. For protection against tribal incursions, the emperor ordered the construction of a new city wall around Rome, much of which still stands and still bears his name.
    In 271 he sought to recover the eastern provinces, which for 10 years had obeyed the rule of the princes of Palmyra. He besieged Palmyra and captured Septimia Zenobia, regent for her young son Wahballat (called Vaballathus in Latin); shortly afterward the capital surrendered. Aurelian then marched to the Danube, where he defeated the Carpi. When Palmyra revolted a second time in 273, Aurelian recaptured and destroyed the city.
    In 274 he returned west to confront Tetricus, the rival emperor, who controlled Gaul, Spain, and Britain. Beset by a German invasion and by internal conspiracies, Tetricus concluded a secret treaty with Aurelian, deserting to him at the Battle of Châlons. The leaderless army of the Rhine was swiftly defeated, and Tetricus was rewarded with the governorship of Lucania but only after marching in Aurelian’s triumph alongside Zenobia. Thus the vast empire was again ruled by a central authority.
    Aurelian was an outstanding general and a severe and uncompromising administrator. By increasing the distribution of free food at Rome, he did more for the plebeians than almost any other emperor.
    Early in 275, while marching to open a campaign against Persia, Aurelian was murdered by a group of officers who had allegedly been misled by his secretary into believing themselves marked for execution. The government was continued in the name of Aurelian’s widow, Ulpia Severina, until, after six months, the Senate appointed the elderly Marcus Claudius Tacitus to the throne. The empire remained divided and chaotic until Diocletian’s ascension (AD 284).
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    NOTE: Frascatius is a life member (LM #6864) of the American Numismatic Association (ANA). Frascatius fully complies with the ANA Member Code of Ethics.
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