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Vitellius. AD 69. AR Denarius (18mm, 3.41 g, 6h). Rome mint. Laureate head right / Vesta seated right on throne, holding patera and scepter. RIC I 107; RSC 72.

Augustus. 27 BC-AD 14. Æ Dupondius (26mm, 12.49 g, 4h). Rome mint. L. Naevius Surdinus, moneyer. Struck 15 BC. Legend in three lines within laurel-wreath / Legend around large S • C. RIC I 384.

EGYPT, Alexandria. Augustus. 27 BC-AD 14. Æ Chalkous (15mm, 3.39 g, 12h). Struck circa 2/1 BC. Laureate head right / Headdress of Isis within wreath. RPC 5023; Milne -; Emmett -.

Agrippina Senior. Died AD 33. Æ Sestertius (28.30 g, 6h). Rome mint. Struck under Claudius, AD 41-42. Draped bust right / Legend around large S • C. Cf. RIC I 102 (Claudius) var. (rev. legend); cf. Von Kaenel Type 78 var. (same); cf. Trillmich pl. 4-5 var. (same).

AUGUSTAN AND JULIO CLAUDIAN DYNASTY

 

CALIGULA, A.D. 37-41. AR Denarius (3.71 gms), Lugdunum Mint, ca. 37/8 A.D.

RIC-2; S-1808.

SPAIN, Hispalis. Divus Augustus, with Julia Augusta (Livia). Died AD 14. Æ 32mm (26.77 g, 3h). Radiate bust of Augustus right; star above, thunderbolt before / Bare head of Livia set on globe left; crescent above. RPC I 73.

KINGS of THRACE. Rhoemetalces, with Augustus. 11 BC-AD 12. Æ 23mm (10.33 g). Jugate heads of Rhoemetalkes, diademed, and Pythodoris right; small head before / KAISAROS SEB[AS]TOU, bare head of Augustus right. RPC I 1711.

GAIUS (CALIGULA), with DIVUS AUGUSTUS. 37-41 AD. AR Denarius (18mm, 3.73 gm). Lugdunum (Lyon) mint. Struck 37-38 AD. C. CAESAR. AVG. GERM. P. M. TR. POT, laureate head of Caligula right / DIVVS. AVG PATER. PATRIAE., radiate head of Divus Augustus right. RIC I 16; BMCRE 17; BN 21; RSC 2.

Gaius, the youngest son of Germanicus and Agrippina Senior, became emperor at only 25 years of age. Not having the experience or military prestige to assure his elevation, Gaius called on dynastic loyalty to win the support of the military and people of Rome. Accordingly, many of his coins concentrate on the dynastic theme, and the first type struck draws attention to his relationship to the founder of the empire, his great-grandfather Augustus.

 

Octavian. 30-29 BC. AR Denarius (3.79 g, 6h). Italian (Rome?) mint. Bare head right / IMP CAESAR on the architrave of Octavian’s Actian arch (arcus Octaviani), showing a single span surmounted by Octavian in facing triumphal quadriga. RIC I 267; CRI 422; RSC 123; BMCRE 624 = BMCRR Rome 4348; BN 66.

Octavian. 31-30 BC. AR Denarius (3.93 g, 12h). Italian (Rome?) mint. Bare head left / CAESAR DIVI F across field, Victory standing left on globe, holding wreath in extended right hand and palm frond in left. RIC I 254b; CRI 407; RSC 64; BMCRE 603 = BMCRR Rome 4339; BN 36-40.

Nero. AD 54-68. Æ As (25mm, 7.51 g, 7h). Balkan mint (Perinthus?). Struck circa AD 64-66. Laureate head right / Eagle standing facing, head right, on globe; [S]-C flanking. MacDowall, “Two Roman Countermarks of AD 68”, NC 1960, p. 108, III; RIC I (old edition) 439; RIC I (new edition) -, but see discussion on pp. 186-7; RPC I 1762.

 

This reverse type is derived from the Divus Augustus Pater series. Other ases from this mint adopt the Neptune type struck in the name of Agrippa under Caligula

 

Divus Augustus. Died AD 14. Æ Sestertius (27.10 g, 12h). Rome mint. Struck under Tiberius, AD 36-37. Quadriga of elephants walking left, with riders; Augustus, radiate, seated left in car, holding laurel branch and scepter / Legend around large S • C. RIC I 68 (Tiberius).

Quinarius, Lugdunum circa 37-38, AV 3.85 g, 11h.

C CAESAR AVG GERMANICVS Bare head of Gaius r. Rev. P M TR POT COS Victory, draped, seated right on globe, holding wreath in both hands. Left wing visible behind right.

BMC 6. RIC 5.

Also see:

A 'new' gold quinarius of Caligula.

by Bendall, Simon .

Type: Article

Description: ill .

Subject(s): Quinarius (Coin) | Rome -- Caligula -- 37-41

In: Numismatic Fine Arts quarterly journal Mar. 1985, no. 29, p. 1-2.

 

Portraits of Caligula : the seated figure? /

by Geranio, Joe .

Type: Article

In: Celator Vol. 21, no. 9 (Sep 2007),

The 12 Labors of Hercules: Capturing the Cretan Bull

Subscript of Octavian (?)/Augustus to Samos

Description: Archive wall, column 4, second course

Text: Inscribed area, W. 2.03 x H. 0.295. In l.l, the letters ΕΓΡΑ are cut on an inset piece of stone, presumably replacing a piece on which the cutter had made an error.

Letters: Second to third cent. A.D.: ave. 0.02; ligatures: ΤΗ l.2, ΗΜ, ΗΝ, ΝΗ, l.3, ΗΝ, ΗΜ, ΝΜ, ΝΕ, l. 4, ΝΜ, ΜΗΝ, l.5, ΗΝ, ΝΗ, ΝΜ twice, ΗΜ l. 6; three apices in l. 5; diaeretic dots in l.1 ; star-shaped stops at each end of l. 7.

Date: Inscription: second to third centuries A.D. (lettering, context). Document: early 38 B.C. (content)

Findspot: Theatre: north parodos wall

Original Location: Theatre: north parodos wall

Last recorded location: Findspot

History of discovery: Recorded by the NYU expedition in 1967.

Bibliography: Published by Reynolds, A&R 13 whence SEG 32, 1982.833, BE 1983.374; AnnEpig 1984, 867; SEG 34, 1984.1044, SEG 35, 1985.1081, McCabe PHI Aphrodisias 37 . Discussed, Millar, Emperor in the Roman World, 243, 431-432; by R. Bernhardt, Historia 29 (1980), 190ff.

Text constituted from: transcription (Reynolds) This edition Reynolds (1982).

Edition Diplomatic Epidoc (XML) [Conventions] [Font help] 1 vac. αὐτοκράτωρ Καῖσαρ θεοῦ Ἰουλίου υἱὸς Αὔγουστος Σαμίοις ὑπὸ τὸ ἀξίωμα ὑπέγραψεν

2 ἔξεστιν ὑμεῖν αὐτοῖς ὁρᾶν ὅτι τὸ φιλάνθρωπον τῆς ἐλευθερίας οὐδενὶ δέδωκα δήμῳ πλὴν τῷ τῶν

3[Ἀφροδεισιέων] ὃς ἐν τῷ πολέμῳ τὰ ἐμὰ φρονήσας δοριάλωτος διὰ τὴν πρὸς ἡμᾶς εὔνοιαν ἐγένετο

4 οὐ γάρ ἐστιν δίκαιον τὸ πάντων μέγιστον φιλάνθρωπον εἰκῇ καὶ χωρὶς αἰτίας χαρίζεσθαι ἐγὼ δὲ

5 ὑμεῖν μὲν εὐνοῶ καὶ βουλοίμην ἂν τῇ γυναικί μου ὑπὲρ ὑμῶν σπουδαζούσῃ χαρίζεσθαι ἀλλὰ

6 οὐχ ὥστε καταλῦσαι τὴν συνήθειάν μου· οὐδὲ γὰρ τῶν χρημάτων μοι μέλει ἃ εἰς τὸν φόρον τελεῖτε

7 vac. ἀλλὰ τὰ τειμιώτατα φιλάνθρωπα χωρὶς αἰτίας εὐλόγου δεδωκέναιv οὐδενὶ βούλομαι 1 ΑΥΤΟΚΡΑΤΩΡΚΑΙΣΑΡΘΕΟΥΙΟΥΛΙΟΥΥΙΟΣΑΥΓΟΥΣΤΟΣΣΑΜΙΟΙΣΥΠΟΤΟΑΞΙΩΜΑΥΠΕΓΡΑΨΕΝ

2ΕΞΕΣΤΙΝΥΜΕΙΝΑΥΤΟΙΣΟΡΑΝΟΤΙΤΟΦΙΛΑΝΘΡΩΠΟΝΤΗΣΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΙΑΣΟΥΔΕΝΙΔΕΔΩΚΑΔΗΜΩΠΛΗΝΤΩΤΩΝ

3[············]ΟΣΕΝΤΩΠΟΛΕΜΩΤΑΕΜΑΦΡΟΝΗΣΑΣΔΟΡΙΑΛΩΤΟΣΔΙΑΤΗΝΠΡΟΣΗΜΑΣΕΥΝΟΙΑΝΕΓΕΝΕΤΟ

4ΟΥΓΑΡΕΣΤΙΝΔΙΚΑΙΟΝΤΟΠΑΝΤΩΝΜΕΓΙΣΤΟΝΦΙΛΑΝΘΡΩΠΟΝΕΙΚΗΚΑΙΧΩΡΙΣΑΙΤΙΑΣΧΑΡΙΖΕΣΘΑΙΕΓΩΔΕ

5ΥΜΕΙΝΜΕΝΕΥΝΟΩΚΑΙΒΟΥΛΟΙΜΗΝΑΝΤΗΓΥΝΑΙΚΙΜΟΥΥΠΕΡΥΜΩΝΣΠΟΥΔΑΖΟΥΣΗΧΑΡΙΖΕΣΘΑΙΑΛΛΑ

6ΟΥΧΩΣΤΕΚΑΤΑΛΥΣΑΙΤΗΝΣΥΝΗΘΕΙΑΝΜΟΥΟΥΔΕΓΑΡΤΩΝΧΡΗΜΑΤΩΝΜΟΙΜΕΛΕΙΑΕΙΣΤΟΝΦΟΡΟΝΤΕΛΕΙΤΕ

7 ΑΛΛΑΤΑΤΕΙΜΙΩΤΑΤΑΦΙΛΑΝΘΡΩΠΑΧΩΡΙΣΑΙΤΙΑΣΕΥΛΟΓΟΥΔΕΔΩΚΕΝΑΙVΟΥΔΕΝΙΒΟΥΛΟΜΑΙ

  

αὐτοκράτωρ

Καῖσαρ

θεοῦ

Ἰουλίου

υἱὸς

Αὔγουστος

Σαμίοις

ὑπὸ

τὸ

ἀξίωμα

ὑπέγραψεν

 

ἔξεστιν

ὑμεῖν

αὐτοῖς

ὁρᾶν

ὅτι

τὸ

φιλάνθρωπον

τῆς

ἐλευθερίας

οὐδενὶ

δέδωκα

δήμῳ

πλὴν

τῷ

τῶν

  

Ἀφροδεισιέων

 

ὃς

ἐν

τῷ

πολέμῳ

τὰ

ἐμὰ

φρονήσας

δοριάλωτος

διὰ

τὴν

πρὸς

ἡμᾶς

εὔνοιαν

ἐγένετο

 

οὐ

γάρ

ἐστιν

δίκαιον

τὸ

πάντων

μέγιστον

φιλάνθρωπον

εἰκῇ

καὶ

χωρὶς

αἰτίας

χαρίζεσθαι

ἐγὼ

δὲ

 

ὑμεῖν

μὲν

εὐνοῶ

καὶ

βουλοίμην

ἂν

τῇ

γυναικί

μου

ὑπὲρ

ὑμῶν

σπουδαζούσῃ

χαρίζεσθαι

ἀλλὰ

 

οὐχ

ὥστε

καταλῦσαι

τὴν

συνήθειάν

μου·

οὐδὲ

γὰρ

τῶν

χρημάτων

μοι

μέλει

εἰς

τὸν

φόρον

τελεῖτε

  

ἀλλὰ

τὰ

τειμιώτατα

φιλάνθρωπα

χωρὶς

αἰτίας

εὐλόγου

δεδωκέναιv

οὐδενὶ

βούλομαι

 

Translation:

Imperator Caesar Augustus, son of divus Julius, wrote to the Samians underneath their petition:

 

You yourselves can see that I have given the privilege of freedom to no people except the Aphrodisians, who took my side in the war and were captured by storm because of their devotion to us. For it is not right to give the favour of the greatest privilege of all at random and without cause. I am well-disposed to you and should like to do a favour to my wife who is active in your behalf, but not to the point of breaking my custom. For I am not concerned for the money which you pay towards the tribute, but I am not willing to give the most highly prized privileges to anyone without good cause.

 

Commentary:

See Aphrodisias and Rome, 104-106.

educational use only

Unknown

Description English: Portrait of Agrippina the Elder. Marble, 1st century CE, found at the forum of Ziane, Tunisia.

Français : Agrippine l'Aînée. Marbre, Ier siècle ap. J.-C., découvert sur le forum de Ziane, en Tunisie.

References Inv. Babelon n° 45

Source/Photographer User:Jastrow (2006)

 

Mosaico polícromo de teselas de mármol.

Finales del siglo III d. C.

Villa romana de Bell-lloc.

Girona.

Museo Arqueológico de Barcelona.

Used with permission from jenjordt's photostream

An aristocratic Roman matron whose hair arrangement closely resembles that of Agrippina Minor. 50-65 CE. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. Credits: Ann Raia, 2009.

educational use only

GAIUS (CALIGULA), with DIVUS AUGUSTUS. 37-41 AD. AR Denarius (18mm, 3.43 gm). Lugdunum (Lyon) mint. Struck 37-38 AD. Laureate head of Gaius (Caligula) right / Radiate head of Divus Augustus right. RIC I 16; RSC 2.

 

Gaius, the youngest, and only surviving son of Germanicus and Agrippina Sr., became emperor at only 25 years of age. Although he had long been admired by his father's legions (they had given him the nickname Caligula), since, as a small child, he had accompanied his father and mother to the front, he lacked the first-hand military experience of his father, great-uncle, and great-grandfather. Gaius, therefore, relied on dynastic association to win the support of the military and people of Rome. Accordingly, many of his coins recall his dynastic connections to both the Julians and the Claudians, and this type emphasizes his relationship to the founder of the empire, his great-grandfather Augustus.

 

CAPPADOCIA, Caesaraea-Eusebia. Tiberius, with Drusus Caesar. AD 14-37. AR Drachm (3.79 g, 12h). Struck AD 33/4. Laureate head of Tiberius right / Bare head of Drusus Caesar left. RPC I 3622; RIC I 86; Sydenham, Caesarea 45.

C. Cassius Longinus. Early 42 BC. AR Denarius (18mm, 3.82 g, 6h). Military mint, probably at Smyrna. P. Cornelius Lentulus Spinther, legate. Filleted tripod surmounted by cortina and two laurel branches / Capis and lituus. Crawford 500/1; CRI 219; Sydenham 1308; RSC 7.

 

The obverse of this rare denarius closely copies the reverse of the aureus struck by M. Aquinius, and was probably minted on the occasion of the meeting in Smyrna between Cassius and Brutus. The capis and lituus, symbols of the pontificate, recall Spinther’s election to that college in 57 BC.

 

The Grohmann Museum, 'Man at Work' collection, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

If you are interested in Julio Claudian Iconography and portrait study you may enjoy these two links:

 

Julio Claudian Iconographic Association- Joe Geranio- Administrator at groups.yahoo.com/group/julioclaudian/

 

The Portraiture of Caligula- Joe Geranio- Administrator- at

portraitsofcaligula.com/

 

Both are non-profit sites and for educational use only.

LYDIA, Tralles. Augustus, with Caius Caesar. 27 BC-AD 14. Æ (20mm, 5.71 g, 12h). Struck circa 2 BC. KAIΣA-PEΩN, bare head of Augustus right / ΓAIOΣ [KAIΣAP], bare head of Caius right. RPC I 2646 var.; RPC Supp. I -; RPC Supp. II -. Extremely rare and apparently unrecorded.

 

RPC 2646 (itself apparently unique) is different in several respects: both obverse and reverse legends run in opposite directions, with the ethnic being completely behind the bust of Augustus, there is no star on the reverse, and the bust of Caius is enclosed within a wreath. The reverse of the current coin is of the same design as that of the obverses of 2649 and 2650, dated to circa 2 BC, and provides a link between RPC 2646, dated very tentatively to circa 10-5 BC, and the supposed later types. All are very likely from the same issue, which is probably no earlier than 2 BC. cngcoins.com

  

Augustus. 27 BC-AD 14. AR Quinarius (1.86 g, 6h). Emerita mint. P. Carisius, legate. Struck circa 25-23 BC. Bare head left / Victory standing right, placing wreath on a trophy consisting of helmet and cuirass; at base of trophy, dagger and sword hilt. RIC I 1b; RSC 387; BMCRE 295 = BMCRR Spain 123-124; BN 1072-1076. cngcoins.com

The Caesarians. Julius Caesar. April-August 49 BC. AR Denarius (18mm, 4.15 g, 9h). Military mint traveling with Caesar. Elephant advancing right, trampling on horned serpent / Emblems of the pontificate: simpulum, aspergillum, securis, and apex. Crawford 443/1; CRI 9; Sydenham 1006; RSC 49. cngcoins.com

Objetos de la cocina.

Objetos de bronce

Cultura romana.

Museo Arqueológico de Barcelona

 

Augustus. 27 BC-AD 14. AV Quinarius (3.90 g, 7h). Lugdunum (Lyon) mint. Struck AD 7. AVGVSTVS DIVI F, laureate head right / [T]R POT XXX, Victory, draped, seated right on globe, holding wreath in both hands . RIC I 217; Lyon 80; Bahrfelt 229; BMCRE 505; BN 1679-80.

ROMAN REPUBLICAN MARBLE NEAR LIFESIZE HEAD OF AN ELDER MALE

 

Carved in high relief, facing right.

An exceptional example of Roman veristic portraiture.

 

Cf. Vermeule, Sculpture in Stone, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 324 for another very similar head referred to as ‘Homer’.

 

Mid-1st Century BC

 

H. 10 1/2 in. (26.7 cm.)

 

Art of the Ancient World, 2007, no. 20

Art of the Ancient World, 1992, no. 37

educational use only

Spiral

Italic, Etruscan, Archaic Period, 6th century B.C.

Electrum

 

Used with permission of jenjordt's photostream

SYRIA, Seleucis and Pieria. Antioch. Nero. AD 54-68. AR Tetradrachm (27mm, 14.66 g, 12h). Dated year 110 of Caesarean Era (AD 61/62). Laureate bust right / Eagle standing left on thunderbolt; palm-branch to left. McAlee 259; Prieur 82; RPC I 4182

Augustus. 27 BC-AD 14. AR Denarius (19mm, 3.72 g, 1h). Lugdunum (Lyon) mint. Struck 2 BC-AD 12. Laureate head right / Caius and Lucius Caesar standing facing, holding shields and spears between them; simpulum and lituus above. RIC I 207; RSC 43; Lyon 82.

Statue dedication for emperor Claudius

Description: White marble statue base with heavy moulding above and below on three sides (W. 0.81 at moulding, W. 0.69 at face x H. 0.47 × D. 0.77); the moulding and part of the left side are chipped away.

Text: Inscribed on the face.

Letters: 0.018-0.02

Date: A.D. 41/54 (reign)

Findspot: Walls, South-east: reused and fallen, south of the East gate, near 12.514 (MAMA 434), 12.510 (430), 12.516 (599).

Original Location: Unknown

Last recorded location: Findspot (1983)

History of discovery: Copied in 1705 by Picenini (10102, 28), whence Sherard (10101,39); by Wood (14, f.45); by Deering (2v, no.12); by Loew; by Waddington; by Gaudin (78); by the MAMA expedition; by the NYU expedition in 1977.

Bibliography: Published by Boeckh from Sherard, CIG 2739; corrected by Franz from Loew, a.10 ; published by Waddington, LBW 1621; mentioned by Reinach, from Gaudin's squeeze, 26; published by Cormack from the MAMA records, MAMA 8, 447, whence SEG 1980.1244, McCabe PHI Aphrodisias 203.

Text constituted from: Preliminary transcription (Reynolds); Sherard papers; Wood; Deering; Gaudin squeeze (checked); publications. This edition Roueché and Bodard (2007).

Edition Diplomatic Epidoc (XML) [Conventions] [Font help] 1 Τιβέριον Κλαύδιον Καίσαρα

2 Σεβαστὸν Γερμανικὸν αὐτοκράτορα

3[ὁ δ]ῆμος καὶ Μένανδρος Διογένους

4 τοῦ Ζήνωνος ἀρχιερεὺς αὐτοῦ καὶ v.

5 vacat Διονύσου vacat 1ΤΙΒΕΡΙΟΝΚΛΑΥΔΙΟΝΚΑΙΣΑΡΑ

2[··]ΒΑΣΤΟΝΓΕΡΜΑΝΙΚΟΝΑΥΤΟΚΡΑΤΟΡΑ

3[··]ΗΜΟΣΚΑΙΜΕΝΑΝΔΡΟΣΔΙΟΓΕΝΟΥΣ

4[·]ΟΥΖΗΝΩΝΟΣΑΡΧΙΕΡΕΥΣΑΥΤΟΥΚΑΙ

5 ΔΙΟΝΥΣΟΥ

 

Τιβέριον

Κλαύδιον

Καίσαρα

   

Σε

     

βαστὸν

Γερμανικὸν

αὐτοκράτορα

  

  

δ

 

ῆμος

καὶ

Μένανδρος

Διογένους

   

τ

     

οῦ

Ζήνωνος

ἀρχιερεὺς

αὐτοῦ

καὶ

   

Διονύσου

  

Apparatus

Letters recorded by Deering but not read subsequently are highlighted.

 

Translation:

(Statue of) Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus Imperator: the People (put up his statue, acting) with Menandros son of Diogenes the son of Zenon, his high priest, and (?priest) of Dionysos.

 

Commentary:

The wording would seem to imply that Menandros was high -priest of Dionysos; but such a position would be very unusual, and it seems likely that in this text, which is unconventionally phrased, we should understand 'priest'.

 

For Menandros son of Diogenes, a combination of names which occurs several times, see Name index.

 

educational use only

Mármol blanco.

Siglo I d. C.

Procedente de Cartagena.

Museo Arqueológico de Barcelona.

Gaius (Caligula). AD 37-41. Æ As (29mm, 11.18 g, 6h). Rome mint. Struck AD 37-38. Bare head left / Vesta seated left, holding patera and scepter. RIC I 38. cngcoins.com

LYDIA, Thyateira. Nero. As Caesar, AD 50-54. Æ 17mm (3.15 g, 12h). Draped bust right / Labrys. RPC 2381; SNG Copenhagen 595; BMC 58

This Dutch landscape by an unknown artist is from around 1680 to 1730. Executed in oils on canvas, the rather whimsical cottage features brick and gable work like that found in Normandy in France, although it does not look like a typical landscape of the region.

 

Measuring fourteen inches by twenty inches the workmanship of the artist is beautiful. The very ornate frame is gilt plaster, some of which was chipped and then repaired. The repairs have sadly discoloured with age.

 

This painting languishes in a dining room decorated (appropriately) in "Dutch Gold" paint which has not seen daylight for more than fifteen years (thus the cobwebs on the wall). The owner of this painting is very elderly, and the house beyond their control. However, by being hidden from daylight, the colours in this delightful scene are preserved for future generations, I hope!

  

Private collection.

ROMAN MARBLE OVER LIFE-SIZE HEAD OF A YOUNG WOMAN

 

Her centrally parted hair braided and coiled at the back of the head, a curl falling down either side of her neck.

 

Over life-size portraits of this period are rare and of females are even more rare.

 

Late Republican, ca. 40-20 BC

 

H. 14 1/2 in. (36.8 cm.)

 

Art of the Ancient World, 2005, no. 13

for educational use only

 

If you are interested in Julio Claudian Iconography and portrait study you may enjoy these two links:

 

Julio Claudian Iconographic Association- Joe Geranio- Administrator at groups.yahoo.com/group/julioclaudian/

 

The Portraiture of Caligula- Joe Geranio- Administrator- at

portraitsofcaligula.com/

 

Both are non-profit sites and for educational use only.

EGYPT, Alexandria. Agrippina Junior. Augusta, AD 50-59. Æ Diobol (27mm, 10.73 g, 12h). Dated RY 13 of Claudius (AD 52/3). Wreathed and draped bust of Agrippina Junior right / Wreathed and draped bust of Euthenia right; L - IΓ across field. RPC I 5194; Köln 110-2; Dattari (Savio) 179; K&G 13.4.

Sextus Pompey. 42-40 BC. AR Denarius (19mm, 3.32 g, 2h). Uncertain Sicilian mint, possibly Catana. Bare head of Pompey the Great right; capis behind, lituus before / Neptune standing left, holding aplustre and resting foot on prow between the Catanaean brothers Anapias and Amphinomus running in opposite directions, bearing their parents on their shoulders. Crawford 511/3a; CRI 334; Sydenham 1344; RSC 17 (Pompey the Great).

Tiberius. AD 14-37. Æ Sestertius (34mm, 26.51 g). Rome mint. Struck AD 21-22. Tiberius seated left on curule chair, holding patera and sceptre / Large S C. RIC I 48.

1 2 ••• 74 75 76 78 80