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NYINC Signature Sale 3097  10 Jan 2022
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Lot 30064

Estimate: 20 000 USD
Price realized: 55 000 USD
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Ancients
C. Cassius Longinus, Assassin of Caesar and Imperator (44-42 BC), with M. Servilius, as Legate. AV aureus (20mm, 8.20 gm, 6h). NGC AU 5/5 - 3/5. Military mint moving with Cassius and Brutus, possibly in Sardis, summer 42 BC. C•CASSI•IMP, laureate head of Libertas right / M•SERVILIVS-LEG, aplustre or acrostolium (stern-mounted galley pennant), the branches terminating in flowers. Crawford 505/1. Sydenham 1311. Cassia 20. Calicó 67. Vagi 101. Sear Imperators 224. Bahrfeldt 60.4 (this coin). Very rare and the last issue of Cassius. Nicely struck on bright flan with light toning.

Ex Biaggi Collection (Numismatica Ars Classica, Auction 51 (5 March 2009), lot 110; Numismatica Ars Classica, Auction 31 (26 October 2005), lot 10; Platt Hall Collection (Glendining, 1950), lot 654; Vierordt Collection (Schulman, 1923), lot 507; Graf Tolstoi Collection (Hess, 1912), lot 478

Shakespeare depicts the "lean and hungry" Cassius as the primary ringleader in the conspiracy against Julius Caesar, motivated more by envy than by any love of liberty. The Bard gets the basic facts right, but omits the details of Cassius' colorful career. Born into a senatorial family, but lacking any real talent for politics, Gaius Cassius Longinus found soldiering more to his liking and joined the triumvir Crassus on his doomed expedition against the Parthians in 53 BC. Cassius managed to rescue himself and a handful of others from the massacre and escaped to Roman Syria, where he remained for another two years ably defending the province from Parthian attack. He returned to Rome as a war hero in 51 BC and fell in with the Pompeian faction, serving as tribune and commander of Pompey's fleet during the civil war of 49-48 BC. After Pompey's defeat and death, Cassius accepted a pardon from Caesar and loyally served him for the next four years.

Cassius had a high opinion of himself and perhaps hoped to attain supreme power once Caesar retired, but it soon became apparent the dictator had no intention of stepping down. Thus, Cassius suborned his close friend Marcus Junius Brutus and several other senators into a conspiracy, and he was one of the first to plunge his dagger into Caesar on the Ides of March, 44 BC. After fleeing Rome with the other conspirators, Cassius returned to Syria and commandeered several crack legions and a fleet, which he used to attack and pillage the wealthy island of Rhodes in order to procure gold for the approaching civil war. He joined forces with Brutus in 42 BC and the two marched into Thrace to meet the pro-Caesarian legions led by Marc Antony and Octavian. Though their army outnumbered the Caesarians, Cassius and Brutus seemed oddly fatalistic and made a suicide pact should either meet defeat or capture. At the first clash at Philippi in early October, Cassius suffered a reverse and rashly fell on his sword before he could be told that Brutus had counterattacked and saved the day. Demoralized by his friend's death, Brutus was easily defeated three weeks later and took his own life.

The head of Liberty on the obverse reflects the Republican party line against supporters of the dead tyrant Caesar, while the naval pennant, or aplustre, refers to Cassius' victory at Rhodes.

https://coins.ha.com/itm/ancients/roman-republic/ancients-c-cassius-longinus-assassin-of-caesar-and-imperator-44-42-bc-with-m-servilius-as-legate-av-aureus-2/a/3097-30064.s?type=DA-DMC-CoinArchives-WorldCoins-3097-01102022

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Estimate: 20000-30000 USD
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