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6 Batak St.
Varna, 9000
BULGARIA
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Monday to Friday: 7AM - 7PM
Weekend: 10AM - 5PM
Address
6 Batak St.
Varna, 9000
BULGARIA
Work Hours
Monday to Friday: 7AM - 7PM
Weekend: 10AM - 5PM
36,00 €
999 Fine Silver Roman Imperatorial Denarius Sextus Pompey, mint moving in Sicily in 42-38 B.C. struck by moneyer Q. Nasidius (fleet commander). References: Pompeia 30 and Nasidia 4; RSC 21; Syd 1351; Sear Imp 236; Cr. 483/1.
Please allow us up to 3 business days to ship your product. Small variations in shape, weight, and color are to be expected as each piece is handmade.
Sextus Pompey, the son of Pompey the Great, as an active player during the civil war (45-35 BC) minted several issues (RRC 477, 478, 479, 483, 511). He used them not only to pay his troops and followers but also to promote himself. To do that he started to propagate his exeptional piety – pietas. At first, he was doing that by emphasizing his devotion to his famous father (pietas erga patrem). On this coin you can see him portraying his father as Neptune. Then, he introduced also other meanings of pietas – adversus deos and erga patriam. Sextus promoted the concept in many various ways – using monetary legends, symbols, personifications and allegories. Such a consistency in his propaganda was very unusual for the previous Republican coinage. Thus, it was a key step toward the monetary propaganda we know from the later, imperial coinage.
DESIGN:
Obverse side
Bare head of Pompey the Great left; dolphin below and trident in left field
Legend:
NEPTVNI
Reverse side
Four galleys without sails about to engage in combat, two moving right, two moving left
Legend:
Q NASIDIVS
A perfect choice for Numismatists, Historians, Military Veterans, Collectors.
Weight | 3,28 g |
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Dimensions | 18,8 mm |
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