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Auction 94  6 October 2016
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Lot 177

Estimate: 35 000 CHF
Price realized: 67 500 CHF
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The Roman Empire
Domitian caesar, 69 – 81

Sestertius early 76-early 77, Æ 25.51 g. CAESAR AVG F DOMITIANVS COS IIII Laureate head r. Rev. PA – X – AVGVSTI Pax standing l., in outstretched r. hand and cornucopiae in l. C –. BMC Vespasian –. RIC 925. CBN –.
Very rare and in exceptional condition for the issue, undoubtedly one of the finest
sestertii of Domitian in existence. A bold portrait and a wonderful dark
green patina. Good extremely fine


Ex Helios sale 4, 2009, 320.

Ex Hess-Leu 41, 1969, Virgil Brand, 151 and Leu 87, 2003, Perfectionist, 16 sales.
As the younger son of Vespasian, Domitian hardly benefited from his father's fame during his formative years, whereas his older brother, Titus, experienced quite the opposite. In both cases their childhood and adolescences seem to have galvanized their personalities and their perspectives on the world. Titus grew up when his father was greatly favored in the court of Claudius; indeed Titus was a boyhood friend of Claudius' son Britannicus and very nearly died from the poison that killed Britannicus. When Vespasian fell out of favour for most of Nero's reign (as he was closely associated with the fallen Narcissus), Domitian was then in his formative years, and his life experience was one of relative poverty and isolation. Then, when Nero recalled Vespasian from obscurity to serve as proconsul in Africa, and later still to lead the war in Judaea, Titus was 27 years old and was able to join his father; Domitian was only 15 years old and remained in Rome. While Vespasian and Titus gained glory in Judaea and Alexandria, Domitian lived dangerously in war-torn Rome. Once again, as Titus benefited, Domitian suffered – this time as a potential target of Galba and Otho, and as a dangerously obvious target of Vitellius. Indeed, in the final days of Vitellius' regime, Domitian narrowly missed death by disguising himself as a devotee of Isis and escaping the burning Temple of Capitoline Jupiter in which his uncle, the prefect of Rome Flavius Sabinus, perished. Even when his father and brother returned to Rome, Domitian was not taken seriously. He received many superficial honors (see Suetonius, Domitian 1-2), but was entrusted with no real responsibility and played a distant second fiddle to his brother. Thus, it is no surprise that Domitian was rumored to have murdered Titus, in whose shadow he had always lived enviously, nor is it any wonder that when Domitian finally assumed supreme power, he ruled in a more extravagant fashion than his father and brother.


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