羅馬帝國. Didius Julianus (AD 193). Denarius Rome

開始競投
€ 1

添加到您的最愛以在拍賣開始時收到提醒。

Carmen Vera Gutiérrez
專家
由Carmen Vera Gutiérrez精選

資深古董鑑定師,專精於西班牙及古代硬幣。

估價  € 1,300 - € 1,500
Catawiki買家保障

在您收到物品前,我們會妥善保管您的付款。查看詳情

Trustpilot評分 4.4 | 136422 則評論

Trustpilot獲得極佳評等。

賣家描述

*此硬币附带真实性证书*

Roman Imperial
Didius Julianus. AD 193. AR Denarius (17mm, 2.38 g, 12h). Rome mint. IMP CAES M DID IVLIAN AVG, laureate head right / CONCO R D MILIT, Concordia, draped, standing facing, head left, holding aquila in each hand. RIC IV 1; RSC 2; BMCRE 2-3. Almost VF.

Didius Julianus was born to a wealthy family in AD 137, probably in Milan. He had a prominent government career, including several provincial governorships, in the reigns of Marcus Aurelius and Commodus. Though successful, he did not earn the respect of his fellow senators, who regarded him as a sensualist and a spendthrift. When the Emperor Pertinax was killed by the Praetorians after only a three-month reign on March 28, AD 193, no ready successor was at hand. Pertinax's father-in-law, Flavius Sulpicianus, entered the Praetorian camp and tried to get the troops to proclaim him emperor, but he was met with little enthusiasm. Sensing an opportunity, Didius Julianus rushed to the camp and began to make cash promises to the soldiers from outside the wall. Soon the scene became an auction, with Sulpicianus and Julianus striving to outbid each other for the favor of the troops. When Sulpicianus reached 20,000 sesterces per soldier, Didius Julianus upped the bid by a whopping 5,000 sesterces, signaling with hand gestures. The emperorship was sold. Julianus was allowed into the camp and the Praetorians proclaimed him emperor. Confronted by the Praetorian swords, the Senate approved his elevation, but could not hide its disgust. Disturbances broke out throughout the city, and a crowd at the Colosseum loudly called for Pescennius Niger, governor of Syria, to march on Rome. Niger was not the only alternative. Two other provincial governors also declared themselves emperor: Clodius Albinus in Britain, and Septimius Severus in Pannonia. Severus, closest to Rome, immediately marshaled his troops and invaded Italy. Julianus at first tried negotiations, then sent assassins to kill Severus, to no avail. Julianus next tried to fortify Rome but the results were ineffective and ludicrous. With Julianus' authority in Rome rapidly deteriorating, Severus sent messages to the Praetorians, who renounced their allegiance to Julianus. Seeing their cue, the Senators proclaimed Severus emperor and passed a death sentence on Julianus. On June 1, AD 193, a Praetorian officer found the cringing Julianus hiding in the palace and dispatched him, ending his pathetic 65-day reign.

The lot could be subject to additional costs such as customs clearance and the costs of import duties. Please note that these costs fall to the buyer. SHIPPING TO US IS CURRENTLY NOT POSSIBLE!

賣家的故事

作为古币商,一旦接触到这些古代文物,我就自然而然地爱上了它们,自从几年前开始出售以来一直如此。在我的拍卖中,总能看到价格亲民且价值不俗的藏品混搭,尤其偏爱拜占庭币(有时也来自我的个人收藏)
由Google翻譯翻譯

*此硬币附带真实性证书*

Roman Imperial
Didius Julianus. AD 193. AR Denarius (17mm, 2.38 g, 12h). Rome mint. IMP CAES M DID IVLIAN AVG, laureate head right / CONCO R D MILIT, Concordia, draped, standing facing, head left, holding aquila in each hand. RIC IV 1; RSC 2; BMCRE 2-3. Almost VF.

Didius Julianus was born to a wealthy family in AD 137, probably in Milan. He had a prominent government career, including several provincial governorships, in the reigns of Marcus Aurelius and Commodus. Though successful, he did not earn the respect of his fellow senators, who regarded him as a sensualist and a spendthrift. When the Emperor Pertinax was killed by the Praetorians after only a three-month reign on March 28, AD 193, no ready successor was at hand. Pertinax's father-in-law, Flavius Sulpicianus, entered the Praetorian camp and tried to get the troops to proclaim him emperor, but he was met with little enthusiasm. Sensing an opportunity, Didius Julianus rushed to the camp and began to make cash promises to the soldiers from outside the wall. Soon the scene became an auction, with Sulpicianus and Julianus striving to outbid each other for the favor of the troops. When Sulpicianus reached 20,000 sesterces per soldier, Didius Julianus upped the bid by a whopping 5,000 sesterces, signaling with hand gestures. The emperorship was sold. Julianus was allowed into the camp and the Praetorians proclaimed him emperor. Confronted by the Praetorian swords, the Senate approved his elevation, but could not hide its disgust. Disturbances broke out throughout the city, and a crowd at the Colosseum loudly called for Pescennius Niger, governor of Syria, to march on Rome. Niger was not the only alternative. Two other provincial governors also declared themselves emperor: Clodius Albinus in Britain, and Septimius Severus in Pannonia. Severus, closest to Rome, immediately marshaled his troops and invaded Italy. Julianus at first tried negotiations, then sent assassins to kill Severus, to no avail. Julianus next tried to fortify Rome but the results were ineffective and ludicrous. With Julianus' authority in Rome rapidly deteriorating, Severus sent messages to the Praetorians, who renounced their allegiance to Julianus. Seeing their cue, the Senators proclaimed Severus emperor and passed a death sentence on Julianus. On June 1, AD 193, a Praetorian officer found the cringing Julianus hiding in the palace and dispatched him, ending his pathetic 65-day reign.

The lot could be subject to additional costs such as customs clearance and the costs of import duties. Please note that these costs fall to the buyer. SHIPPING TO US IS CURRENTLY NOT POSSIBLE!

賣家的故事

作为古币商,一旦接触到这些古代文物,我就自然而然地爱上了它们,自从几年前开始出售以来一直如此。在我的拍卖中,总能看到价格亲民且价值不俗的藏品混搭,尤其偏爱拜占庭币(有时也来自我的个人收藏)
由Google翻譯翻譯

詳細資料

時代
1400年前
文化/地區
羅馬帝國
額外資料
Rome
統治者
Didius Julianus (AD 193)
Denomination
Denarius
金屬
AR
狀態
未分類
波蘭已驗證
1917
已售物品
98,59%
私人top

類似物品

中的精彩好物

古代錢幣