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Antoninianus - Carus SPES PVBLICA; Spes

Antoninianus - Carus (SPES PVBLICA; Spes) - obverseAntoninianus - Carus (SPES PVBLICA; Spes) - reverse

© Artifacts of Empire Collection (CC BY-SA)

Features

Issuer RomeRoman Empire (27 BC - 395 AD)
Emperor Carus (Marcus Aurelius Carus) (282-283)
Type Standard circulation coins
Years 282-283
Value Antoninianus (1)
Currency Antoninianus, Reform of Caracalla (AD 215 – 301)
Composition Srebro
Weight 3.999 g
Diameter 23 mm
Shape Okrągły (nieregularny)
Technique Młotkowana
Orientation Variable alignment ↺
Demonetized Yes
Number
N#
296239
References RIC V.2# 82f
Percy H. Webb, Harold Mattingly, Edward Allen Sydenham; 1933. The Roman Imperial Coinage / Volume 5.2. Marcus Aurelius Probus – Maximian (AD 276–310). Spink & Son, London, United Kingdom.
, OCRE# ric.5.car.82
Online Coins of the Roman Empire (http://numismatics.org/ocre/)
, RCV III# 12180
David R. Sear; 2005. Roman Coins and Their Values / Volume 3. The Third Century Crisis and Recovery AD 235-285. Spink & Son, London, United Kingdom.
, Cohen# 79
Description historique des monnaies frappées sous l'Empire Romain. Paris, France (13 volumes).
, Hunter# 15
Donald Bateson, Isabelle Gaudy-Campbell; 1998. Byzantine and Early Medieval Western European Coins in the Hunter Coin Cabinet. Spink & Son, London, United Kingdom.
, Pink# p.28, series 2
Karl Pink, Robert Göbl; 1974. Die Münzprägung der Ostkelten und ihrer Nachbarn = Coinage of the Eastern Celts and their neighbours (2nd Edition). Klinkhardt & Biermann, Braunschweig, Lower Saxony, Germany.

Obverse

Popiersie Carusa, promienisty, w pancerzu, w prawo.Automatically translated

Script: łaciński

Lettering: IMP CARVS P F AVG

Unabridged legend: Imperator Carus Pius Felix Augustus.

Reverse

(en) Spes, draped, walking left, holding flower in right hand and raising robe with left hand.
Officina and value mark in exergue.

Script: łaciński

Lettering: SPES PVBLICA

Unabridged legend: Spex Publica.

Mint

Ticinum, modern-day Pavia, Italy

Comments

(en)

While the coin is billon by virtue of being comprised of heavily debased silver, this level of debasement resulted in a coin that was more than 90% bronze with a very low-purity silver plating. The featured example has mostly intact silvering and retains a great deal of its original lustre, though a small mineral deposit is present on the reverse. At this point in numismatic history, the antoninianus was toward the tail-end of its roughly eighty-year run and essentially at its “rock bottom” during the Crisis of the Third Century, when chronic civil wars prompted the debasement of the coinage. 

 

The excess silver was used to raise and maintain legions to fight these wars. Of course, debasement could also occur on the whim of a profligate emperor with expensive taste. Or it could simply be due to regular silver shortages. Remember, silver was the coinage of trade. In the Roman Empire, the flow of goods went from East to West, while the flow of silver went from West to East. This means that Western silver was used to pay for luxury goods and exotic items from trading lanes such as the Silk Road, land and maritime routes. 

Starting with Caracalla in 215 CE and ending with Diocletian around 286 CE, the antoninianus simply fell victim to entirely too many civil wars, fiscally irresponsible emperors over a roughly fifty-year period of chronic usurpations from within, and staving off barbarian incursions from without. The antoninianus ended exactly as it began - debased. 

See also

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Date VG F VF XF AU UNC
ND (282-283)  (en) 2nd Officina (SXXI)

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