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Research Coins: Electronic Auction

 
337, Lot: 444. Estimate $100.
Sold for $160. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

Lucius Verus. AD 161-169. AR Denarius (18mm, 3.39 g, 6h). Rome mint. Struck AD 165. Laureate head right / Parthian captive seated right, hands bound behind his back; at feet, bow, quiver and shield. RIC III 540 (Aurelius); MIR 18, 112-14/30; RSC 273. VF, toned, a few scratches.


From Group SGF.

Between AD 162 and 166, Lucius Verus was in the East overseeing the campaign against Parthia in an attempt to regain control of Armenia from them. In AD 163, the Roman general Statius Priscus attacked the Parthian forces and quickly destroyed their stronghold of Artaxata. To complete the process, Priscus installed the pro-Roman Sohaemus on the Armenian throne, thereby once again insuring a Roman buffer against the Parthian Empire. For this achievement, Verus received the cognomen Armeniacus, a title granted not because of any command in the field, but as the operation’s commander-in-chief.