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Marcus Salvius Otho with Securitas on Reverse AR Denarius Roman Empire 69 AD Museum Reproduction CSRD0017

36,00 

Silver Roman Empire Denarius (19.6mm, 3.46g.) Otho, Rome mint, struck 69 A.D. References: BMC 18. Cohen 17. RIC 8.

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Tacitus described Otho as an “extravagant young man” who devoted himself to sensuousness and to fashionable pursuits. He was renowned for his vanity, his fastidious grooming, and for the splendid toupees that covered his balding head. The wigs are so vividly rendered on his coin portraits, with a manicured care that one could think that Otho himself had personally approved each of the dies for his coins.

If Galba’s rise to power was a shocking novelty because he was the first emperor to be hailed by legions outside of Rome, the stakes were raised by his successor Otho, who was the first emperor to openly attain his office through the murder of his predecessor. Galba’s last moments were filled with terror, and, as Suetonius (Galba, 20) reports, his corpse was callously defiled: “Galba was murdered beside the Curian pool, and left lying just as he fell. A private soldier returning from the grain issue set down his load and decapitated Galba’s body. He could not carry the head by the hair – for there was none – but stuffed it in his cloak; and presently brought it to Otho with his thumb thrust into the mouth. Otho handed the trophy to a crowd of servants and camp-boys, who stuck it on a spear and carried it scornfully round the camp…” Such was the environment in which Otho took control – a disturbing state of affairs that seemed like it could not persist, yet would get worse for the next eleven months until soldiers loyal to Vespasian entered Rome on December 20, 69 and restored some semblance of order. Otho’s coinage is unique among his contemporaries, for he struck only at the mint in Rome, produced no imperial bronzes, nor any reverse types of direct historical value. The other emperors of the civil war – Galba, Vitellius and Vespasian – all had a variety of interesting reverse types, struck a full range of imperial bronzes, and produced many of their imperial coins at mints in the provinces. With this in mind we can see how this superb denarius distinguishes itself from the mass of Otho’s coinage: not only does it have an unusually sensitive and dignified portrait, but it employs his only interesting reverse type, with which he attempts to curry optimism among his soldiers despite the long odds they faced in the upcoming contest with Vitellius.
DESIGN:
Obverse side
Bare, bewigged head right
Legend:
IMP M OTHO CAESAR AVG TR P

Reverse side
Securitas standing left, holding wreath and sceptre
Legend:
SECVRITAS P R

A perfect choice for Numismatists, Historians, Military Veterans, Collectors.

Weight 3,46 g
Dimensions 19,6 mm

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