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Classical Numismatic Group, LLC
Electronic Auction 538  10 May 2023
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Lot 525

Estimate: 500 USD
Price realized: 850 USD
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Nerva. AD 96-98. Æ Sestertius (33.5mm, 22.98 g, 6h). Rome mint. Struck AD 96. Laureate bust right, slight drapery / FIS[CI IVDIACI C]ALVMNIA SVBLATA, S C across field, palm tree with two clusters of dates. RIC II 58 var. (bust type); Hendin 6634 var. (same); Banti 15. Mottled brown, red, and green patina. Near VF.

David Hendin wrote, in his Guide to Biblical Coins, Sixth Edition, that "In all likelihood (this reverse type) celebrates Vespasian's requirement of 71/2 CE that the annual didrachm Temple Tax, the Fiscus Iudaicus, be paid to Rome rather than to the Jewish Temple. This tax was extended to every Jew, male and female, from the age of three, and even to slaves of Jewish households. The proceeds were earmarked for the rebuilding of the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus Capitolinus in Rome, which had been destroyed in the last days of the Roman Civil War of 68-69."


"Thus, FISCI IVDIACI CALVMNIA SVBLATA ('the insult of the Jewish Tax has been removed') would refer to Vespasian's removal of the insult that prior to 71/2 the Jewish Temple Tax had been collected by Jews for their own use. After all, Romans considered themselves the only legitimate taxing authority within the empire, and the only rightful beneficiary of tax revenues."


"In summary, the idea that this coin represents a Roman apology, or a Roman acknowledgment of its own callous behavior, must be abandoned" (pp. 420-1).
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