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Roman Historians and the Roman Coinage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
Extract
There is no novelty in suggesting the importance of Roman coins as a source for the study of Roman history; a considerable number of works have explored the possibilities of the subject. The chief problem, however, has always lain in appreciating how far they can take us in an understanding of events: the coins are after all often as tendentious as the literary sources are sometimes alleged to be–or even more so. Further, when the historian moves from attempting to explain the legends to such matters as interpreting features of the portraiture, he is moving on to very subjective ground: for example, what may be the significance of the fact that on Nerva's Divvs Avgvstvs coins, the portrait of Augustus begins to look uncannily like that of Nerva himself? Or again, what are we to make of the fact that the obverse portrait on early coins of Trajan bears a resemblance to that of Nerva?
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References
NOTES
1. A list cannot be exhaustive, but four studies will demonstrate the possibilities: Sutherland, C. H. V., Coinage in Roman Imperial Policy, 31 B.c.–A.d. 68 (London, 1951)Google Scholar, and the same author's The Emperor and the Coinage: Julio-Claudian Studies (London, 1976)Google Scholar; Grant, M., From Imperium to Auctoritas (Cambridge, 1948)Google Scholar, and the same author's Roman History from Coins (Cambridge, 1958).Google Scholar
2. The chief concordances of Roman imperial coins are: Mattingly, H., Sydenham, E. A., Sutherland, C. H. V. (edd.), The Roman Imperial Coinage (London, 1923–)Google Scholar; referred to as RIC; Mattingly, H., A Catalogue of Coins of the Roman Empire in the British Museum (London, 1923)Google Scholar; referred to as BMC Emp.
Nerva's DIVVS AVGVSTVS coins are given in BMC Emp. (Nerva), 149 ff.Google Scholar
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31. See Dio 65.7.2 for the tax, and 68.1.2 for Nerva's action.
32. See Syme, R., ‘The Imperial Finances under Domitian, Nerva and Trajan’, JRS 20 (1930), 63.Google Scholar
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47. Dio 57.8.2.
48. Pliny, , Pan.Google Scholar 78.2–3: cf. Victor, , Caes.Google Scholar 12.1 (‘Quid enim Nerva Narniensi prudentius magisque moderatum?’).
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52. BMC Emp. (Vespasian), 178.Google Scholar
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56. Pliny, , Pan.Google Scholar 8.2. and ILS 2720 (Syme, R., Tacitus i. 11)Google Scholar. Cf. Leo, p. 283, 6–9Google Scholar Cram—ἐκ Пαιονίας δὲ ἀγγελία ἐпινικίων ἐλθοûσα пαρὰ Τραιανοû…
57. Pan. 8.5: ‘Inritamentum istud irarum et fax tumultus fuisset, nisi incidisset in te.’ It is presumably in the context of Trajan's ‘claims’ that Victor (Epit. 13.6) says of Trajan's friend, Licinius Sura, ‘cuius studio imperium arripuerat’. Sura may well have been consul in 97 (Syme, R., Tacitus, ii. 641.).Google Scholar
58. Pan. 9.1. and 10.
59. Syme, R., Tacitus i.12.Google Scholar
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