559

Roman Emp., Gallienus, Aureus 265

Currency:CHF Category:Coins & Paper Money / Coins: Ancient Start Price:12,000.00 CHF Estimated At:15,000.00 - 18,750.00 CHF
Roman Emp., Gallienus, Aureus 265
The sign-up for this auction will close 48 hours before the auction starts. Please make sure you sign up on time. Also, there is NO ABSENTEE BIDDING for this auction. Please plan to bid live during the sale.
The Roman Empire, Gallienus sole reign, 260 – 268, Aureus 265, AV 3.45 g. GALLIEN – VS P F AVG Head l., wearing wreath of reeds. Rev. VBI – QVE PA – X Victoria in fast biga r., holding reins in l. hand and whip in r. C 1018. RIC 72. Kent-Hirmer pl. 132, 496. RIC 72. Göbl 691. Huvelin-Lafaurie, RN 1980, 5 (these dies). Calicó 3598. Very rare. A superb portrait of excellent style well struck on a full flan. Insignificant light scratch on reverse below exergual line, otherwise good extremely fine / extremely fine Ex Sternberg 24, 1990, 318; M&M 92, Friends of the Romans, 2002, 227 and NAC 31, 2005, American collector, 100 sales. The portrait of this coin is of remarkable style, representing the apex of Gallienus’ "classical renaissance". It belongs to a single emission late in his reign that seems to have followed his initiation into the most important of all Greek occult rituals, the Eleusinian Mysteries. This portrait style occurs only on ceremonial gold pieces and large bronze medallions. The most striking aspect of the portrait is its style, which arguably is the best achieved in Gallienus’ 15-year reign. Gallienus is one of the most interesting and enigmatic of all Roman emperors. Throughout his uncharacteristically long reign of 15 years, he fought on all fronts to keep Rome’s enemies at bay. Meanwhile, he survived perhaps a dozen serious coups and revolts within the empire. From a statistical point of view his reign was a disaster: he lost the western provinces to the rebel Postumus, and he lost most of the Roman east to the Palmyrene king Odenathus. What remained of the central empire was in chaos until the day Gallienus died at the hands of assassins. What is seldom considered, however, is how badly the odds were stacked against Gallienus, and how an emperor with less dedication, talent and ingenuity would not have lasted so long. Clearly, Gallienus operated at a level of genius few possessed or appreciated, and for which few historians have given him sufficient credit. He suffered the deaths of his two sons and the capture of his father, yet he continued the struggle. Indeed, if we believe the characteristically biased sources for this period, Gallienus found solace in every imaginable vice and distraction: sloth, alcohol, philosophy, the arts, adultery and materialism. Much as historians have rightly cast doubts on the extremes of Tiberius’ behaviour while exiled on Rhodes and Capri, we should extend the same benefit of the doubt to Gallienus. Even if even most of his bad press is in some way based in truth, we must appreciate the balance he managed to achieve while a collapsing world was set squarely on his shoulders.