Sale: CNG 69, Lot: 1831. Estimate $200. Closing Date: Wednesday, 8 June 2005. Sold For $275. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee. |
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CONSTANS II. 641-668 AD. AV Solidus (4.28 gm, 7h). Constantinople mint. Struck 641 AD or later. Small, crowned beardless facing bust, holding globus cruciger / Cross potent on three steps; A/CONOB. DOC II 1a (Heraclonas); MIB III 3a; SB 936. Good VF, slightly clipped. Overstruck on an earlier type. ($200)
As discussed in Triton VIII, lot 1371, there is still room for debate about the attribution of coins from the period immediately after the death of Heraclius, when his sons, Heraclius Constantine by Fabia and Heraclonas by Martina, held the throne for brief periods before the accession of Constans II, or Constantine. It seems likely that MIB 1 and 2 (Constans II) belong to one of the two ephemeral rulers, the portrait being distinctly different with its plumed crown. MIB 3a and 4a (Heraclonas?) are more problematic, the portaits and titulature being very close to later, securely identified issues of Constans. The only difference is that the head on these pieces is a bit smaller and rounder, while the Constans solidi have a longer face and an out-thrust chin, a chin which in later years he tooks pains to hide behind a luxuriant beard. It is difficult to determine whether the Byzantines would have recognized these slight differences in physiognomy as portraits of two different emperors. In addition, MIB 3a and 4a are encountered relatively frequently, as opposed to the genuinely rare MIB 1 and 2, and thus are less likely to be from a very brief reign, such as that of Heraclonas (6 months).