Address
6 Batak St.
Varna, 9000
BULGARIA

Work Hours
Monday to Friday: 7AM - 7PM
Weekend: 10AM - 5PM

Vespasian Commemorating Judaea Capta AR Denarius Roman Empire 69-70 AD Silver Coin Museum Reproduction CSRD0058

39,00 

Silver Roman Empire Denarius (19.2mm, 3.13g.) Vespasian, commemorating Judaea Capta, Rome mint, struck 69-70 A.D. References: RIC 2, RSC 226, Hendin 1479.

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.

Add to Wishlist
Add to Wishlist

After the Romans quelled the Jewish Revolt in 70 CE, the respective Emperors chose to advertise the victory widely and in no uncertain terms. In addition to victory parades, in which both prisoners of war and the sacred vessels of the Temple were displayed victory steles were constructed and coins were struck throughout the empire. The coins, most bearing the inscription ‘Judaea Capta’ (Judaea is captured) were struck for over a decade in many different mints even as far afield as Germany and Spain. On most coins there is a female figure seated depicting Judaea, bent over in a position of mourning, sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by a soldier or trophy. Bronze coins were also struck in Caesarea inscribed in Greek so that the local populace could read them.

Some speculate that Nero sent Vespasian to Judaea to punish him for falling asleep during one of Nero’s interminable public performances. Be that as it may, that’s where he was when he heard that Nero had committed suicide, and that Galba had been named the new Emperor. He did not declare support for Galba, but neither did he move against him. When Galba was killed and Otho donned the Imperial Purple, though, Vespasian did declare his support and prepared to come to Otho’s aid against the usurper Vitellius.
But the Vitellian troops moved so fast that Otho was already dead before Vespasian could get his troops on the road. Upon hearing Otho was dead, Vespasian’s troops proclaimed him Emperor. He accepted, though with some reluctance, some say. Otho’s supporters quickly came over to him. Vitellius’s reign was precipitously and ignominiously ended, and the Senate announced that Rome had its fourth new emperor in just over a year.
Vespasian was a new style of emperor, a product of the middle classes rather than a patrician. He had quite a sense of humor (the historian Suetonius described it as being “… of a low and buffoonish kind”). As often as not, he was the butt of his own jokes, and he would encourage others to tell jokes at his expense as well.
With the treasury depleted by Nero’s greed and war, Vespasian raised taxes extensively. Probably his most infamous was his tax on public urinals. His son, Titus, declared that this was undignified, to which Vespasian offered him some gold coins to sniff, commenting: “See, my son, if these have any smell.” When Titus assured him that they had no odor, he replied, “and yet, they come from urine!” But he didn’t resort to executions and confiscations, as several of his predecessors had.
Also in contrast to his predecessors, Vespasian did not take revenge upon the supporters and families of his defeated enemies. He even helped Vitellius’s daughter make a good marriage and supplied her with a dowry. Vespasian was known for his public building projects, including the Colosseum (built on the site of the lake outside of Nero’s “Golden House”) and his finishing the Temple to the Deified Claudius, which Nero had begun to demolish as part of his plans for the grounds of his personal residence.
In his eleventh year as emperor, Vespasian fell ill. Near death, he couldn’t resist a final joke, stating: “Methinks I’m becoming a god!” He then declared that “… an emperor should die standing” and struggled to his feet before collapsing and dying. He left an empire that was enjoying peace and prosperity, and with a well stocked treasury. Not bad, considering the state of the empire when he started.
DESIGN:
Obverse side
Laureate head of Vespasian right
Legend:
IMP CAESAR VESPASIANVS AVG

Reverse side
Jewess sits on the ground to right in attitude of mourning; Roman trophy behind
Legend:
IVDAEA

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

Weight 3,13 g
Dimensions 19,2 mm

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Vespasian Commemorating Judaea Capta AR Denarius Roman Empire 69-70 AD Silver Coin Museum Reproduction CSRD0058”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *