Julius Caesar. 49-44 BC. Cast Æ "Sestertius" (36mm, 21.02 g, 2h). Paduan type. Later cast after Giovanni da Cavino, 1500-1570. CAESAR / DIC[T PER] PETVO, Laureate head of Julius Caesar right. / Crossed fasces and caducues; an axe, clasped hands, globe and LEVCA, around. Klawans 3. VF, brown surfaces.
From the Ken Bressett Collection. Ex Lincoln Higgie c.1968 for @ $25.
Trained as a goldsmith and metalworker, Giovanni da Cavino is best known for his medals, in particular those imitating ancient coins. Whether Cavino's ancient imitations were intended to deceive has been a matter of debate, but the majority of scholars are now in agreement that they were not. Rather, Cavino's medals demonstrate a shift from fanciful interpretations of ancient coins, such as those produced by Valerio Belli, to a more serious study of the originals. It was only later in the 16th century, when a forgery industry developed around Padua, that Cavino's work became lumped in with these forgeries, and both the Cavino medals and the outright forgeries began to be referred to together as "Paduans."