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Classical Numismatic Group, LLC
Electronic Auction 506  15 Dec 2021
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Lot 485

Estimate: 75 USD
Price realized: 50 USD
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Constantine II. As Caesar, AD 316-337. Æ Follis (19mm, 3.28 g, 7h). Londinium (London) mint. Struck AD 321. Radiate, draped, and cuirassed bust left / BEAT TRA-NQVLLITAS, globe set upon altar; three stars above; P-A//PLON. RIC VII 216. Brown patina. VF.

From the Richard L. Horst Collection.

The output of the mints at Londinium, Lugdunum, and Treveri served as an important source of propaganda for the entirety of the western empire during the first quarter of the fourth century AD. Constantine and Licinius both drew upon a variety of reverse designs in order to signify such ideas as strength, tranquility, and prosperity, though matters between the two were ever-unstable as war broke out between them in AD 316, most likely over a mutual envy and mistrust of one another. The resulting peace in early AD 317 was short-lived and tensions were only subdued, as hostilities once again gradually increased, culminating in the battle of Chrysopolis in AD 324, the execution of the Licinii, and the sole-reign of the house of Constantine.

A 'happy tranquility,' the beatas tranquillitas type conveys the tranquil state of the empire which Constantine and Licinius wished to promote.
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