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Electronic Auction 571 – Session 1

Lot nuber 442

TROAS, Ilium. temp. Flavian era. AD 79-96. Æ Semis (20.5mm, 3.88 g, 12h). Near VF.


Electronic Auction 571 – Session 1
Lot: 442.

Closing Date: Sep 25 2024 10:00 ET

Roman Provincial, Bronze

Estimate: $ 200

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TROAS, Ilium. temp. Flavian era. AD 79-96. Æ Semis (20.5mm, 3.88 g, 12h). Aeneas advancing right, head left, leading Ascanius by the hand, and holding Anchises on his hip / Helmeted bust of Athena wearing aegis left, holding serpent-entwined spear over shoulder. Bellinger T129; RPC II 895; SNG Copenhagen 368. Red and brown patina, some roughness, lamination flaw on obverse, some smoothing and details enhanced. Near VF.

Ex Classical Numismatic Group Electronic Auction 170 (8 August 2007), lot 165; Classical Numismatic Group 51 (15 September 1999), lot 873.

The city of Ilium was founded by the emperor Augustus on the site of the legendary city of Troy. According to Vergil (Aeneid, Book 2), Aeneas, the son of the goddess Venus and the Trojan Anchises, fled with some remnants of the city’s inhabitants as it fell to the Greeks, taking with him his son, Ascanius, his elderly father, Anchises, and the Palladium, or ancient sacred statue of Athena. The Trojans eventually made their way west to resettle in Italy. There they intermarried with the local inhabitants and founded the town of Lavinium, and thereby became the nucleus of the future Roman people. One of the descendants of Aeneas’ son Ascanius (known now as Iulus) was Rhea Silvia. Impregnated by the god Mars, she gave birth to the twins, Romulus and Remus. Exposed by their great-uncle, Amulius, the twins were suckled by a she-wolf, but they were eventually rescued. Romulus later founded the city of Rome, and consequently the image of the she-wolf and the twins became the symbol of that city. The mythological depictions on this coin reinforce the importance of Ilium, not only as the seedbed of the future Roman people, but also as the mother city of the future caput mundi.

Closing Date and Time: 25 September 2024 at 12:27:00 ET.

All winning bids are subject to a 20% buyer’s fee.