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Numismatica Ars Classica
Auction 125  23-24 Jun 2021
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Lot 605

Estimate: 2000 CHF
Price realized: 1900 CHF
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Octavian as Augustus, 27 BC – AD 14.
L. Mescinius Rufus. Denarius 16 BC, AR 3.93 g. CAESAR AVGV – STVS TR POT Laureate head r. Rev. L·MESCINIVS – RVFVS IIIVIR Cippus inscribed IMP / CAES / AVG / LVD / SAEC, flanked by XV – S F. C 461. BMC 90. RIC 355. CBN 339.
Rare. A bold portrait and a magnificent old cabinet tone, reverse slightly
off-centre, otherwise good very fine / about extremely fine

Although the dates are uncertain, the Ludi Saeculares, the centennial games celebrating the anniversary of Rome's foundation, were first celebrated in either the mid-4th or the mid-3rd century B.C. The games should have been celebrated in the early 40s B.C., but at the time Caesar had cast his die, crossing the Rubicon and bringing to the Roman world two long decades of civil war and upheaval. After the wars and once firmly established in power, in 17 B.C. Augustus revived the ancient Tarentine games as the Ludi Saeculares, allowing future emperors who wished to hold the games two different dating cycles from which to choose. The reverse of this fine denarius of Augustus shows a cippus, or short dedicatory pillar or column, upon which is inscribed the commemorative inscription IMP CAES AVG LVD SAEC in five lines. It was struck by the moneyer L. Mescinius Rufus in the year following the games, and in the field either side of the cippus is inscribed XV S F (quindecemviri sacris faciundis), which honours the fifteen members of the priestly college whose responsibilities in part included the proper sacred observances associated with the games. Although it is not certain where the cippus was located in Rome, it was probably erected within the confines of the Campus Martius as it was the scene of the rituals that preceded the celebrations (see Atti del Congresso internazionale di numismatica, Roma, ii, pp. 277ff).
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