NumisBids
  
Roma Numismatics Ltd
Auction XXI  24-25 Mar 2021
View prices realized

Lot 999

Estimate: 5000 GBP
Price realized: 19 000 GBP
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus AV Solidus. Constantinople, AD 945. ⧾ IҺS XPS RЄX RЄςNANTIЧM, bust of Christ Pantokrator facing / ⧾ COҺSTAҺT AVT CRAT' b' R', crowned bust of Constantine VII facing, wearing loros and holding globus surmounted with patriarchal cross. Füeg 13.A.2; DOC 13b.1 var. (obv. legend); Sear 1747. 4.13g, 19mm, 6h.

About Extremely Fine. Very Rare.

From a private German collection.

Constantine Porphyrogenitus was the son of Leo VI by his fourth wife, Zoe Carbonopsina, and shared the status of co-emperor with his uncle Alexander from the age of four. Following the death of Leo in 912, Constantine retained his status under Alexander until the latter's death the following year. As Constantine was by now only the age of seven, the government was assumed by his mother Zoe for the next six years. In 919 Constantine married Helena, the daughter of his admiral Romanus Lecapenus, who assumed the regency and became Augustus the following year. For almost a quarter of a century, Constantine was to be allowed no part in government and relegated in the line of succession behind the sons of Romanus: Christopher, Stephen and Constantine.

The unexpected deposition of Romanus in December 944 at the hands of his two surviving sons, Stephen and Constantine, finally gave the legitimate emperor the opportunity to seize power for himself. Both the Lecapeni were quickly overthrown on 27 January 945 and Constantine finally became sole ruler at the age of 39. This solidus was struck during the first few months of Constantine's sole reign and proudly boasts the title autokrator (sole ruler) on the reverse. Whilst the individual portrait of Constantine signifies the end of nearly three decades lived in the shadow of regents and rival emperors, it also marks a departure from the double-portraits depicting emperors and their heirs typically found on the coinage and seals of the Macedonian dynasty since the reign of Basil I. It was short-lived however, as Constantine waited only ten weeks before raising his son, Romanus II, to the rank of co-emperor on 6 April 945.
Question about this auction? Contact Roma Numismatics Ltd