NumisBids
  
Roma Numismatics Ltd
Auction XX  29-30 Oct 2020
View prices realized

Lot 619

Estimate: 15 000 GBP
Price realized: 19 000 GBP
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
Commodus, as Caesar, AV Aureus. Rome, AD 178. L AVREL COMMODVS AVG, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right / TR P III IMP II COS P P, Castor standing left, holding spear and horse by its bridle. RIC 648; BMCRE 774-775; Calicó 2337 (this coin). 7.35g, 21mm, 11h.

Fleur De Coin. Very Rare.

This coin published in X. Calicó, Los Aureos Romanos (2002);
From the Long Valley River Collection;
Ex John Whitney Walter Collection, Stack's Rare Coins, 29 November 1990, lot 54;
Ex Superior Galleries, 7 June 1987, lot 4522.
Ex Numismatic Fine Arts Inc., Auction 16, 2 December 1985, lot 482;
Ex Bank Leu AG, Auction 36, 7 May 1985, lot 284.

When this type was minted Commodus was only 16 or 17 years old, and yet the reverse legend declares him to have held tribunician power three times, been acclaimed imperator twice, consul once, and ironically, to be pater patriae - father of the state. That he was offered this honorific, accepted it and used it immediately upon his coinage is an indication of his disposition, for it was the custom of emperors to decline the honour if offered to them too early or while they were too young. Even Nero declined the title when it was offered to him in the first year of his reign, accepting it only later. It was also customary for the honoured to defer the usage of the title for a suitable length of time out of humility - Hadrian deferred its use for eleven years.

Only the previous year had Commodus been granted the rank of Augustus, thus formally sharing power with his father, being also consul in that year - the youngest in Roman history up until that time. The reverse displays Castor as the patron of the Equites and protector of the young emperor, and represents Commodus in his role as princeps iuventutis, a title of great honour even in the days of the republic that since the reign of Augustus had been conferred on those who were intended to succeed to the throne, and which Commodus had received in AD 175.

The unhealthy overindulgence of Commodus by his father Marcus Aurelius, which may have in part led to his megalomania in later life, was perhaps due to his being Aurelius' only surviving son. He was showered with honours beyond his years, including having been made Caesar at the age of five. Yet still in this time, never far from his father or his entourage of worthy tutors, Commodus did not publicly display any of the maniacal tendencies that would later come to characterise his reign.
Question about this auction? Contact Roma Numismatics Ltd