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CSNS Signature Sale 3107  3-5 May 2023
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Lot 30075

Starting price: 4000 USD
Price realized: 4000 USD
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Ancients
Julian II, as Augustus (AD 360-363). AV solidus (20mm, 4.45 gm, 7h). NGC AU 4/5 - 2/5, scuffs. Sirmium, AD 361-363. FL CL IVLIA-NVS PP AVG, pearl-diademed, draped, and cuirassed bust of Julian II right, seen from front, with short beard / VIRTVS EXERCI-TVS ROMANORVM, soldier advancing right, helmeted head left, trophy in left hand over shoulder, grasping with right hand the hair of a small captive kneeling right, hands bound behind back; palm SIRM wreath in exergue. RIC VIII 99A corr. (P F AVG). Perfectly centered on matte flan. Solidly struck with excellent details remaining.

Late in AD 359, Constantius II ordered Julian II to send a third of his army to the Eastern front to help fight the Persians. Instead, Julian's legions revolted and proclaimed him Augustus. Constantius' timely death in AD 361 avoided a full-scale civil war. Now, sole emperor, Julian brought his reform-minded administration to Constantinople and tried to strip the Christian church of its privileged position while restoring Paganism to official favor. He ran into stiff resistance and even ridicule at all levels, to which his touchy personality responded poorly. Perhaps seeking to get away from his domestic troubles, he embarked on a massive invasion of Persia in AD 363. At first victorious, his army soon suffered Persian scorched earth tactics and found itself surrounded, without resupply, deep in the Iranian desert. Julian rode out with his vanguard to repel an attack and fell mortally wounded from a spear thrown by a Persian or a disgruntled Christian in his own army. Like his hero Alexander the Great, he died without naming a successor. The army chose Jovian, a Christian, as his replacement, abruptly ending the brief Pagan restoration. Despite his unfulfilled legacy, Julian's restless intelligence and manifold abilities make him one of the most dynamic characters of Late Antiquity, one whose like would not be seen again until the Renaissance.

https://coins.ha.com/itm/ancients/roman-imperial/ancients-julian-ii-as-augustus-ad-360-363-av-solidus-20mm-445-gm-7h-ngc-au-4-5-2-5-scuffs/a/3107-30075.s?type=DA-DMC-CoinArchives-WorldCoins-3107-05032023

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Estimate: 8000-10000 USD
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