NumisBids
  
Numismatica Ars Classica
Auction 106  9-10 May 2018
View prices realized

Lot 1106

Estimate: 40 000 CHF
Price realized: 48 000 CHF
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
Avitus, 455 – 456. Solidus, Mediolanum 455-456, AV 4.47 g. D N AVITVS – PERP F AVG Rosette-diademed, draped and cuirassed bust r. Rev. VICTORI – A AVGGG Emperor standing r., holding long cross in r. hand and Victory on globe in l.; l. foot on captive. In field, M – D and in exergue, COMOB. C 5. Ulrich-Bansa 96. LRC –. Lacam 17. RIC 2403. Depeyrot 22/1.
Very rare and in exceptional condition for the issue. Unusually well
struck and centred on a full flan. Extremely fine

Like many of Rome's emperors, Avitus was hailed Augustus outside of Italy. In his case the location was the provincial capital of Arles, and the circumstances were grim. In September, 454 the emperor Valentinian III murdered his magister militum Aëtius, which was repaid by his own murder six months later. Valentinian was replaced by Petronius Maximus, a usurper whose tyranny invited an invasion of Italy by the Vandals, who sacked Rome on June 1. The void in the summer of 455 was considerable: there was no emperor in the West, and every portable item of value in the capital (including royal hostages) had been carted away by the Vandals. It was at this moment that Avitus courageously became emperor of the West. He did so with the support of the Visigothic king Theoderic II, but he only received the consent of the Eastern emperor Marcian later in the year, when he had made his way to Italy. Avitus had strong connections with the Visigothic court at Tolouse, for whom he was serving as an imperial envoy. He also had extensive experience in government and had acquired military experience under Avitus, one of the most accomplished soldiers of his age. Without Avitus to lead the western armies and fleets, Avitus found a new magister militum in Ricimer, who in 456 scored a major victory against the Vandals off the coast of Corsica. The talent of the new commander was a double-edged sword, for Ricimer became the most important man in the West for the next 16 years. Of more direct interest to Avitus was the fact that Ricimer soon deposed him and replaced him with a sequence of puppet emperors. Local circumstances began to weigh against Avitus, including a famine in Rome and the loss of support from the Visigoths, who were occupied with a war against the Suevi in Spain. All the while, the popularity of Ricimer was on the rise because of his follow-up victory over the Vandals. Finally, on October 17, 456, Avitus was deposed by Ricimer, who made him bishop of Piacenza, an appointment he did not long survive. This solidus was struck at the mint in Arles, which Avitus reopened using workers from Ravenna. Thus, it should not surprise us to see the mint signature of Arles (AR), but the style of Ravenna. Avitus strong ties with the Visigoths also resulted in a large production of imitations of his solidi and tremisses, which presumably were struck at Tolouse for distribution among the Visigoths.
Question about this auction? Contact Numismatica Ars Classica