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CALPURNIA 11 SILVER DENARIUS___Roman Republic___WAR COINAGE OF MARSIC CONFLICT

$ 15.31

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Certification: Uncertified
  • Composition: Silver
  • Item must be returned within: 60 Days
  • Year: 90 BC
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Denomination: Denarius
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

    Description

    19N029
    FRASCATIUS ANCIENTS
    A BEAUTIFUL ROMAN REPUBLIC SILVER DENARIUS OF CALPURNIUA PISO FRUGO FROM 90 BC.
    This extraordinarily large and complex issue represents one of the principal war-coinages of the Romans during the conflict with the Marsic Confederation
    THE SIZE IS 17.9 MM AND 3.36 GRAMS.
    Syd663-670 Sear 235 Craw 340/1
    OBVERSE – Laureate head of Apollo right, number behind; border of dots
    REVERSE – L.PISO FRUG(I) below horseman galloping right, holding palm branch, number above and symbol below
    THE ROMAN REPUBLIC DENARIUS
    The denarius is said to have been one day’s pay for a Roman soldier. The coins were hand struck from hand cut dies.
    The first Roman Republic denarius was struck in 211 BC. It was made from silver the Romans captured when they sacked Syracuse a year before. At first, the denarius weighed a little more than 4 grams, though its weight declined over time
    Designs and legends were controlled by a triumvirate of mint officers called “moneyers”. The post of moneyer was a political appointment in Rome. Moneyers were permitted to use coin designs and inscriptions for self promotion. The typical Roman denarius will have the moneyer’s name, and some evidence of his lineage via other design elements of the coin.
    HISTORY OF THE ROMAN REPUBLIC
    After the deposal of the last Etruscan king, in 509-10 BC, Rome abolished her regal system and instituted a new political order, the Republic. The king was replaced by two consuls and a range of lesser magistrates, elected annually by the whole male citizen body. The consuls chose an advisory council, the Senate, at first ad hoc, later according to well-defined qualifications (of landed wealth, military and political service).
    The consuls led the army in times of war and had executive powers in most others matters. Army service was a duty of citizenship but it was also a privilege for which only the wealthier (who could supply their own equipment) were eligible. Soon a small group of aristocratic families, the patricians, managed to gain a virtual monopoly on the consulship and most other civic and priestly offices till the late 5th century BC, when the plebeians formed their own alternative state within the state and fought successfully in the course of the 4th century to win equal rights.
    A large part of the solution relied on further territorial expansion, to acquire more land which was then allocated among the plebeians. The first city conquered was Veii, a major Etruscan rival a few kilometers north of Rome on the other side of the Tiber, in 396 BC. After Veii Roman armies moved against the rest of Latium and up into the mountains of Samnium, making treaties by threat or outright war until the whole of central Italy was under Roman control. The last Greek stronghold at Taranto was captured in 272 BC.
    Once started, the process of conquest was difficult to arrest. Rome's way to obtain and maintain power in Italy had been to make her enemies into allies and co-opt with them into her own military machine, offering them a share of the booty in return for more fighting men to go on more campaigns.
    After peninsular Italy, the next step was to move over to Sicily in 264 BC, which brought a series of wars with Carthage (near modern Tunis), whose great trading empire ranged from the coast of North Africa over western Sicily, Sardinia, and southern Spain. The three wars between Rome and her rival are known as the Three Punic Wars (265 BC, 219 BC, 149 BC) and ended in 149 BC with the destruction of Carthage, razed and covered with salt. During this century of wars Rome notably extended its domination eventually assuming the role of capital of the Mediterranean. By the 1st century BC Rome had the control over Spain, North Africa, the Balkans, Greece, most of the Aegean, and large parts of Asia Minor and central North Africa.
    After the victorious campaigns, Rome had to learn to administer its conquests. At the beginning the task was very hard because Rome had virtually no bureaucracy, and the Romans preferred not to expand their administrative apparatus. Rome initially used to establish alliances with foreign states and cities or to annex them as provinces governed governor, annually elected by the Roman senate, who held the civil and military authority of that province.
    Their absolute power led many of them to overlook extortion by tax collectors and to commit bribery. The corruption was not effectively prosecuted since the courts showed a strong bias towards the senatorial class. The Roman statesman Cato the Elder's sour prediction that foreign conquest would corrupt Rome itself proved all to be true.
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    NOTE: Frascatius is a life member (LM #6864) of the American Numismatic Association (ANA). Frascatius fully complies with the ANA Member Code of Ethics.
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