Original Skin Coins
Septimius Severus Denarius Ancient Roman Empire Silver Coin 193AD RIC 350A
Septimius Severus Denarius Ancient Roman Empire Silver Coin 193AD RIC 350A
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Obverse: IMP CAE L SEP SEV PERT AVG, Head of Septimius Severus, laureate, right
Reverse: MONETA AVG, Moneta, draped, seated left, holding scales in extended right hand and cornucopiae in left hand
Date: c. 193-195 A.D
ID: RIC IV Septimius Severus 350A
Size: 18mm diameter, 3.26g weight
Composition: Silver
Moneta was the Roman goddess of money. This coin was produced at the Alexandria (Egypt) mint during Septimius Severus' time in the eastern provinces of the Empire in the early years of his reign. It features a distinctly "eastern" style of portraiture and inscriptions compared to coins produced at the main mint in Rome.
In 193 AD, Septimius Severus was proclaimed emperor by his troops after the assassination of Emperor Pertinax. He immediately marched on Rome and defeated his rival claimants to the throne, ending a brief period of civil war known as the Year of the Five Emperors. Severus was an effective ruler and military leader, leading campaigns against the Parthian Empire in the east and kingdoms in North Africa, expanding the Empire to its peak territorial size. But these military campaigns, along with his expansion of the bureaucracy and his intentional debasement of the Roman currency in order to pay the now massive military, weakened the Empire and arguably contributed to the Crisis of the 3rd Century (50 years of nearly continuous civil war).
Upon Severus' death in 211 A.D. due to illness, his two sons Caracalla and Geta became co-emperors. The two brothers hated each other, and in less than a year Caracalla would have his brother stabbed to death (in their mother's arms, no less) in order to become the sole emperor.
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