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Auction XXVII  22-23 Mar 2023
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Lot 751

Estimate: 25 000 GBP
Price realized: 20 000 GBP
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Maximinus II AV Aureus. Antioch, AD 311. MAXIMINVS P F AVG, laureate head to right / CONSVL P P PROCONSVL, laureate and togate emperor standing facing, head to left, holding globe and sceptre; (crescent)SMAΣ* in exergue. RIC VI 127a; C. 10; Depeyrot 26/1; Calicó 5003. 5.28g, 19mm, 12h.

Fleur De Coin; well-centered and in a magnificent state of preservation.

Ex Numismatica Ars Classica AG, Auction 106, 9 May 2018, lot 1044.

Born of Dacian peasant stock to the sister of Galerius, Maximinus rose to high distinction in the army thanks to his uncle's influence as Caesar under Diocletian. In 305, according to Lactantius, Galerius forced Diocletian to abdicate, and through coercion and threats convinced Diocletian to fill the two vacated positions of Caesar with men compliant to his will. Thus, with the abdication of Diocletian and Maximianus, Galerius was raised to Augustus and immediately appointed his nephew Maximinus to the rank of Caesar along with an old friend, Severus. Portrayed by contemporary writers as vulgar, cruel and ignorant, Maximinus II gained eternal notoriety for his persecution of Christians in open defiance of the Edict of Toleration issued by Galerius.

In 313, having imprudently allied himself to Maxentius, the enemy of Constantine and Licinius, Maximinus found himself at war with Licinius, who marched against him and defeated him in a decisive battle at Tirizallum, despite Maximinus' army being a veteran force that outnumbered Licinius by more than two to one. Pursued and besieged by Licinius, he poisoned himself at Tarsus in Cilicia in AD 313, eight years after being named Caesar, and five and a half after assuming the purple. His children were put to death and his wife was thrown into the Orontes at Antioch where by her orders a great number of Christian women had been drowned.
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