Shaving technology in ancient Rome wasn't exactly the Gilette Fusion ProGlide, so I don't blame these emperors for having a neck beard, as disgusting as this particular style may seem to us today. Post any neck-beards or anything you deem relevant! Severus Alexander, AD 222-235 Roman Æ sestertius; 21.72 gm Rome, AD 229 Obv: IMP SEV ALEXANDER AVG, Laureate head right; slight drapery on left shoulder Rev: P M TR P VIII COS III P P S C, Libertas standing left, holding pileus and scepter Refs: RIC 492; BMCRE 570; Cohen 372; RCV 7996 Notes: Die break affects S on reverse Tacitus, AD 275-276 Roman billon antoninianus; 3.57 gm, 21.1 mm Ticinum, AD 276 Obv: IMP C M CL TACITVS AVG, radiate and cuirassed bust, right Rev: VICTORIA GOTTHI, Victoria standing left, holding wreath and palm; P in exergue Refs: RIC 172; Cohen 158; Sear 11821; Hunter 59; CBN 1676
Cool idea for a thread. Fred Sanford had a neck beard... he must have used a Roman razor... Caracalla looks a little sloppy... RI Caracalla 198-217 AR Denarius MONETA
I'm a woman and really should have no say in how and if a man allows his facial hair to grow, but NO. Just, NO to neck beards. That is all.
Back during my undergrad years I went on a little bit of a hippie craze. After not shaving for nearly 3 years, I had quite the beard and neck beard. It was all fun until one day during exam times, after studying for 12 hours in the school library, I went to get some study supplies from my car. I fell asleep inside the car as I was so tired, and woke up to a police officer banging on my car window and telling me the school parking lot was for students only, and he could guide me to a shelter if I needed one. That was quite a wake-up call about my appearance. I went shopping for new clothes and shaved next morning, and dropped the hippie look.
I hate neck beards as well, but a nice chin beard is fine. Anyhow I think this Julian ii shows a neck beard
For quite awhile, I thought the stylish neck beard that Tacitus wears on his coins was the only reason to own one of them. That was before I read about the rare 'XI' and 'IA' marked double antoniniani that he struck. @Valentinian published a study that analyzed the metal composition of a number of these coins and showed that they contained twice the amount silver compared to the 'XXI' marked antoniniani. I recently became the proud new owner of coin 91.68 from that study. But, I suppose more to the point of this thread, behold, the glorious neck beard!... TACITUS Extremely Rare. Billon Double Antoninianus. 3.84g, 23.5mm. Antioch mint. RIC 211; RIC2 temp no. 4087 (6 spec); Esty, Equall, Smith, "The Alloy of the 'XI' Coins of Tacitus", 91.68 (this coin). O: IMP C M CL TACITVS AVG, radiate, draped and cuirassed bust right. R: CLEMENTIA TEMP, Emperor standing right holding sceptre, receiving globe from Jupiter standing left, holding sceptre; A between, XI in exergue.
Wow, nice. I was aware, and on the hunt for a Double Sestertius... but, I was not aware of a Double ANT! Way cool Mr Z! Very nice. Congrats on the capture!
Great neck beard coin! A little known fact - most (if not all) Titus and Domitian portraits sport a 'chin strap' beard. Titus Caesar AR Denarius, 3.00g Ephesus Mint, 74 AD RIC V1470(C), BMC V479, RSC 123, RPC 857 (3 spec.) Obv: IMP T CAESAR COS III; Head of Titus, laureate, bearded, r. Rev: PACI AVGVSTAE (from high r.); Victory adv. r., with wreath and palm; at lower r. star; below, annulet Ex Harry N. Sneh Collection. Domitian Caesar AR Denarius, 3.46g Rome mint, 73 AD RIC V541 (R2), BMC V129 var., RSC 664 Obv: CAES AVG F DOMIT COS II; Head of Domitian, laureate, bearded, r. Rev: No legend; Domitian on horse l.; r. hand raised, sceptre in l. Ex Gemini X, 13 January 2013, Harry N. Sneh Collection, lot 701. = Helios, ebay, 29 November 2010 (A. Lynn Collection). However, any bit of wear usually removes most traces of a beard.
Ummm, how 'bout rockin' a horse wrapped around your face? ... sweet Roman Collector => congrats on scoring that very cool OP-neck-beard (I laughed when I read your post) ... good times
I never thought I would be scouring my collection for neck beards... I won't add to the wealth of Tacitus examples, but here's his bro: @zumbly's Tacitus is impressive, but maybe @Sallent's and this one put Gallienus in the lead: And for one more, here's Max Thrax: I also found neck beards on both a Carus and a Philip I. Who knew they were so popular? (Neck shaving does suck...)
Nero seems to have had the classic neck beard, though one sees it more on statuary than coins. Philip I (just a little bit of neckbeardy action here) Elagabalus, ditto- really more of a beard beard I guess, but looks neckbeardy here. Gallienus. Definite neckbeard. Victorinus. Mostly beard beard, but some neck action. Aurelian. Oh, yeah. You can see the stubble. Tacitus. Probably the best neckbeard example I've got. Licinius I. There's some wispy neckbeard action here. To properly display a neckbeard, you ideally should be jowly and have double- or triple-chins.
Not really a neckbeard, but Septimius Severus seems to have had an interesting twin-pointed beard: Not neckbeard or twin-pointed, but I think Hadrian wore the beard well.