493

Roman Emp., Crispina,

Currency:CHF Category:Coins & Paper Money / Coins: Ancient Start Price:16,000.00 CHF Estimated At:20,000.00 - 25,000.00 CHF
Roman Emp., Crispina,
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The Roman Empire, Crispina, wife of Commodus, Aureus 180-183, AV 7.25 g. CRISPINA – AVGVSTA Draped bust r., hair in coil at back. Rev. VENVS F –ELIX Venus seated l., holding Victory and sceptre; below seat, dove standing l. C 39. BMC Commodus 47. RIC Commodus 287. Calicó 2377. A magnificent portrait perfectly struck in high relief, Fdc Ex NAC sale 25, 2003, 496. Few Romans of high station in the government and the army could have felt secure during the reign of Commodus, a man whose cruel autocracy gave rise to plots against him, and whose suspicious mind is said to have invented plots when actual threats were absent. One of the most famous victims of Commodus was his own wife Crispina, the daughter of one of his father’s comrades-in-arms. She was said to have been exceptionally beautiful, and was married to Commodus when he was fifteen, and as yet only Caesar. We are told that with the passage of time both husband and wife partook in extramarital affairs – Commodus more openly and extravagantly than Crispina. We need not consider ourselves too judgmental when we describe their marriage as an unmitigated failure. Indeed, it came to an end in 182 when Crispina was banished to the island of Capri and was there strangled to death, presumably on Commodus’ orders. The official explanation for Crispina’s severe treatment was her adultery, but historians are rightly suspicious that it was her real or imagined complicity with her sister-in-law Lucilla in a failed plot to assassinate Commodus.