NumisBids
  
Heritage World Coin Auctions
ANA Signature Sale 3056  3 Aug 2017
View prices realized

Lot 30118

Estimate: 30 000 USD
Price realized: 26 000 USD
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
Ancients
Lucius Verus (AD 161-169). AV aureus (19mm, 7.27 gm, 6h). NGC Gem MS 5/5 - 5/5. Rome, December AD 163 - early 164. L VERVS AVG ARMENIACVS, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust of Verus right / TR P IIII IMP II COS II, Victory, half-draped, standing right, placing on a palm tree a shield inscribed VIC / AVG. RIC (Aurelius) 525. BMCRE (Aurelius) 296 note. Cohen --. Calicó 2177. Well struck from fresh dies of the finest style of the era, with needle-sharp detail and full, fiery luster throughout. For those who seek nothing less than perfection, we have here simply unimprovable Roman aureus.

When Antoninus Pius died in March, AD 161, Marcus Aurelius insisted that the Senate also grant his adoptive brother Lucius Verus the title of Augustus, for the first time giving the Empire two theoretically coequal rulers. Marcus had ample experience of government and was widely known to possess the sober qualities of an admirable emperor; Lucius, however, was thought of as a pleasure-loving lightweight. It has been theorized that Marcus intended Verus to serve as the handsome "public face" of the government while he himself retained most of the actual duties. The arrangement was immediately put to the test in AD 162, when the Parthians attacked Rome's eastern provinces. Lucius traveled eastward at the head of a large legionary task force to repulse the invasion and restore order, while Marcus remained in Rome. Rome's top generals served Lucius well and the Parthians were quickly expelled from Armenia, winning him the title Armeniacus. The following year, Roman forces counter-invaded and captured the Parthian capital of Ctesiphon; Lucius was granted the title Parthicus Maximus. He received a hero's welcome in Rome in AD 166 and basked in the glow of a triumph. In many ways this could be viewed as the high-water mark of Roman history, as the returning legions brought with them a virulent plague that rapidly spread throughout the Empire and decimated the population, contributing to the troubles that followed in rapid succession.

HID02901242017

Estimate: 30000-40000 USD
Question about this auction? Contact Heritage World Coin Auctions