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Oct 21, 2021 10 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Ancient Coin of the Day: I’ve been remiss in coin threads this week, so let’s get back to it with this base-silver tetradrachm from Alexandria, ca. AD 66-67, one of a series celebrating Nero.

#ACOTD #Nero #Games

Image: RPC 5300/5. Link - rpc.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/coins/1/5300
This is a great example of Julio-Claudian provincial coinage, part of a series of five base-silver tetradrachms that were issued by Alexandria to celebrate Nero's victories on the 'festival circuit' of Greek games.
The Legend that was universal to the series was ΝΕΡΩ ΚΛΑΥ ΚΑΙΣ ΣΕΒ ΓΕΡ ΑΥ - 'Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus' - with the Legend on the Reverse being specific to each set of games, in this case ΠΟΣΕΙΔΩΝ ΙΣΘΜΙΟΣ – ‘Isthmian Poseidon’.
Other coins in the series commemorated Nero at the Nemean Games (dedicated to Zeus) and the Olympian Games, as on the example below with its Reverse showing ΔΙΟΣ ΟΛΥΜΠΙΟΥ – ‘Olympian Zeus’.

Image: RPC 5927/2. Link – rpc.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/coins/1/5297
The Obverse of this issue also shows the LΙΓ issue mark, noting that it was produced in ‘Year 13’ of Nero’s reign.
Issues also commemorated the games of Pythian and Actian Apollo. Not all of these games were usually held in the same year, with Nero forcing them to hold the Olympics out of sequence (Philostratos, ‘Apollonius’ 5.7.2).

Image: RPC 5302/4. Link – rpc.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/coins/1/5302
Striking on all of these issues is the portrait of Nero adorned with a radiate crown, which was typically a marker of divinity, as noted by Lucan (Civil War, 7.458), thus making its appearance here on a living emperor noteworthy.
This could link with an inscription from Athens (Smallwood 145 = IG II/III 3278 = Sherk 78B), which hails Nero as “Imperator Nero Caesar Augustus, new Apollo”, which would suggest that Nero sought to emphasise his connection with this deity.
This connection is also seen on Nero’s coinage from Rome, with Apollo as a lyre-player featuring on the Reverse of this copper-alloy as, ca. AD 62-68.

Image: RIC Nero 79; British Museum (1921,0612.5). Link - numismatics.org/ocre/id/ric.1(…
For more on this connection, see:

Champlin, Edward. “Nero, Apollo, and the Poets.” Phoenix, vol. 57, no. 3/4, Classical Association of Canada, 2003, pp. 276–83

doi.org/10.2307/3648517

#ACOTD #Nero #Games

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Jul 24
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“errat, qui finem vesani quaerit amoris:
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Image: Parco archeologico di Ostia antica; AE 1987.0177k Image
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May 30, 2023
#EpigraphyTuesday – The rather magnificent tombstone of Longinus Sdapeze, a member of ‘ala I Thracum’, a unit which may have played a role in the Claudian invasion of Britain AD 43. #Latin 🧵

Image: Colchester & Ipswich Museums (COLEM:1928.345). Link – cim-web.adlibhosting.com/ais6/Details/c… Image
Discovered in 1928 and showing evidence of ancient damage, including the break across the main inscription panel, the actual head of Longinus was not found until subsequent excavations in 1996.
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“Longinus Sdapeze
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May 30, 2023
Ancient Coin of the Day: A gander at some coins from Britain prior to the Claudian invasion of AD 43, in particular those of Cunobelinus, the origin of Shakespeare’s Cymbeline. #ACOTD #Numismatics #Britain 🧵

Image: British Museum (1977,0434.6). Link - britishmuseum.org/collection/obj… Image
Cunobelinus was a local British ruler who exerted control over a large area of south-east England, ca. AD 10-40, with a capital at Colchester. He claimed to be the son of Tasciovanus, who had ruled a kingdom centred to the north of the Thames.
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