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Auction 135  21 Nov 2022
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Lot 317

Estimate: 125 000 CHF
Price realized: 240 000 CHF
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The Roman Empire. Manlia Scantilla, wife of Didius Julianus.
Aureus March-June 193, AV 6.82 g. MANL SCAN – TILLA AVG Stolate bust r., hair dressed in two flowing waves and caught up behind in loose chignon. Rev. IVNO·R– EGINA Juno, draped and veiled, standing l., holding patera in r. hand and sceptre in l.; at her feet, peacock l. C 1. BMC D. Julianus 10 and pl. III, 13 (this obverse die). RIC D. Julianus 7a and PL. I, 16 (this obverse die). A.M. Woodward, NC 1961, 1 and pl. VI, 9 (these dies). Calicó 2400.
Very rare and undoubtedly among the finest specimens known of this difficult issue.
A very appealing portrait of fine style. Good extremely fine

Manlia Scantilla was a woman of the second century AD belonging to the gens Manlia-one of the most illustrious patrician families of Rome going back to the days of the early Republic. At some point before AD 153, she married the wealthy Didius Julianus, an accomplished general who had campaigned against the Germanic tribes and held the posts of governor in Bithynia and North Africa. Around AD 153, she gave birth to their daughter, Didia Clara, who gained a reputation for her natural beauty. Following the murder of Pertinax, the Praetorian Guard began an auction for the imperial title. When Julianus learned of this base development, he hurried to the Praetorian Camp and shouted his bids over the walls. At last, on 28 March AD 193, he managed to purchase the title of emperor at the cost of a whopping 25,000 sestertii (6,250 denarii) per soldier. As part of the deal, Manlia Scantilla and Didia Clara both received the title of Augusta. Indeed, the scandal-mongering Historia Augustae claims that it was really mother and daughter who pushed Julianus to buy the imperial title so that they could both be empresses. Unfortunately, the scandal of Julianus' rise to power convinced the rival military commanders Septimius Severus, Clodius Albinus and Pescennius Niger to march against him and each other. On 1 June AD 193, as the forces of Septimius Severus approached Rome, the Senate revoked Julianus' authority and recognized Severus as the new emperor. The following day, Julianus was murdered in the imperial palace. Septimius Severus stripped Manlia Scantilla and Didia Clara of their status as Augustae, but gave them the body of Julianus for a decent burial. They buried him in the tomb of his great grandfather and Scantilla died a month later in obscurity.
Graded Ch AU Strike 5/5 Surface 4/5, NGC certification number 6556714-020
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