KINGS OF ARMENIA. Tiridates II (?), circa 217-252. AE (Bronze, 25 mm, 8.00 g, 12 h). Bearded head of Tiridates II to right, wearing five-pointed tiara tied with a diadem; all within laurel wreath. Rev. 𐡑𐡓𐡃𐡈 / Ϟ𐡌𐡋𐡁 / ΛΙΛ ('trdt mlk' in Aramaic) in three lines within laurel wreath. Kovacs 203. Very rare and among the finest known. A beautifully patinated example with a sharply struck portrait. Extremely fine.
From the collection of an Armenian businessman, acquired before 2021, ex Leu 7, 24-25 October 2020, 1327 and previously from an important collection of Armenian coins.
The legends on this issue are often blundered and hard to read, but it was probably struck by Tiridates II, whose father, Chosroes, was deposed by Caracalla in 214 or 216. Tiridates II was recognized as King of Armenia by Macrinus in 217 and the first Armenian King to strike coins since Tigranes VI in 66/7 AD - yet, as it turned out, also the last. He initially proved to be quite a successful ruler, but was eventually expelled from Armenia in 252 by the Sasanids under Shapur.