Caracalla and his momma--Pentassaria from Marcianopolis

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Roman Collector, Jul 28, 2018.

  1. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    A couple of well-circulated bronze provincials of Marcianopolis, each depicting Caracalla and Julia Domna. It's interesting to note that Caracalla bears the Latin title of Augustus simply transliterated into Greek as ΑVΓΟVCΤΟC rather than translated as CEBACTH, as might be expected.

    We know the coins were issued between 212 and 217 because they bear the name of Quintilanus, known only from coins of Caracalla and Domna during his sole reign.

    Each bear the mark of value, Є (=5), in the left field on the reverse, marking the denomination (pentassarion).

    Post your Caracalla and Domna coins, pentassaria from Marcianopolis, Homonoia coins, Serapis coins, or anything you feel is relevant!

    ~~~

    Homonoia (ὁμόνοια) was the personification of oneness of mind, unanimity, and concord. She is the Greek equivalent of the Latin Concordia.

    Caracalla and Domna Marcianopolis Homonoia.jpg
    Caracalla, AD 198-217, with mother, Julia Domna, AD 193-217.
    Roman provincial Æ pentassarion, 26.1 mm, 10.68 g, 7h.
    Moesia Inferior, Marcianopolis; Quintilianus, legatus consularis, AD 212-217.
    Obv: ΑΝΤΩΝΙΝΟC ΑVΓΟVCΤΟC ΙΟVΛΙΑ ΔΟΜΝΑ, confronted busts of Caracalla and Domna.
    Rev: VΠ ΚVΝΤΙΛΙΑΝΟV ΜΑΡΚΙΑΝΟΠΟΛΙΤΩΝ, Homonoia standing at altar, holding patera and cornucopiae; Є (=5) in field, left.
    Refs: AMNG I 677; Moushmov 489; BMC --.

    ~~~

    At the outset of his reign, Caracalla declared divine support for the Egyptian deity Serapis, a god of healing. The temple of Isis and Serapis in Alexandria was apparently renovated during Caracalla's co-rule with his father Septimius Severus. Upon Caracalla's ascension to sole ruler in 212, the imperial mint began striking coins bearing Serapis' image. This was a reflection of the god's central role during Caracalla's reign. This provincial issue therefore comes as no surprise; it depicts a tetrastyle temple containing a cult statue of Serapis within.

    Caracalla and Domna Markianopolis Temple of Serapis.jpg
    Caracalla, AD 198-217, with mother, Julia Domna, AD 193-217.
    Roman provincial Æ Pentassarion, 25.5 mm, 12.01 g, 7 h.
    Moesia Inferior, Marcianopolis; Quintilianus, legatus consularis, AD 212-217.
    Obv: ΑΝΤΩΝΙΝΟC ΑVΓVCΤΟC ΙΟVΛΙΑ ΔΟΜΝΑ, laureate, draped, and cuirassed bust of Caracalla right vis-à-vis draped bust of Julia Domna left.
    Rev: VΠ ΚVΝΤΙΛ-ΙΑΝ ΜΑΡΚΙΑ-NΟΠΟΛΙΤΩ-Ν, Tetrastyle temple with peaked roof and clipeus in pediment, statue of Serapis within, standing left, raising right hand and holding scepter; Є (mark of value) to left of Serapis.
    Refs: AMNG 689 var.; H&J Marcianopolis, 6.19.46.7 (same dies); Varbanov 1049; Moushmov 508; SNG Evelpides 812 var.; Lindgren II 713 var.; BMC 3. 30, 19 var.; SNRIS Marcianopolis 09.
     
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  3. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

    Love the temple of serapis congrats Roman collector. Caracalla made many offerings to Serapis , hoping to get ride of his nightmares where his bro Geta and his father Severus were pursuing him with their gladius trying to kill him.

    P1170772 212 AD.jpg
     
  4. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    Nice Caracalla and mommy coins. I only recently acquired my first, also from Marcianopolis. The denomination mark on it is retrograde.

    2011822l Caracalla Domna.jpg
    CARACALLA with JULIA DOMNA
    AE28. 13.41g, 28mm. MOESIA INFERIOR, Marcianopolis. Varbanov 1010. O: ANTΩNINOC AVΓOVCTOC IOVΛIA ΔOMNA, Laureate head of Caracalla and draped bust of Julia Domna facing one another. R: VΠ KVNTILIANOV MAPKIANOΠOΛITΩN, Roma (or Athena) standing left, holding patera and poppy; serpent-entwined tree to left, shield and spear to right; Э in right field.
     
  5. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Nice @Roman Collector . Mommy and son...so quaint for a little monster. :) I always wondered who the REAL Julia Domna was producing such as son...

    Provincials are not really my strong suit...

    Here is a Markianopolis and Serapis rolled into one...
    RI Didumenian and Macrinus 217-218 CE AE28 Markianopolis mint Serapis.jpg
    RI Didumenian and Macrinus 217-218 CE AE28 Markianopolis mint Serapis

    Nope, not mommy and son together...
    Caracalla
    upload_2018-7-28_19-43-14.png
    RI Caracalla 198-217 AR Quinarius CE 213 1.3g 13.6mm Laureate - Victory Wreath Palm RIC IV 101 RSC 450 RARE

    Julia-D
    RI Julia Domna 196-211 CE AE As Hilaritas cornuc RIC IVa 877.jpg
    RI Julia Domna 196-211 CE AE As Hilaritas cornuc RIC IVa 877

    My only Homonoia:
    RI Diadumenian 217-218 AE26 Nicopolis ad Istrum Homonoia stdg.jpg
    RI Diadumenian 217-218 AE26 Nicopolis ad Istrum Homonoia stdg

    And, I do not have a Pentassarion per se.... BUT: Penta is 5 and Assarion is reminiscent of Roman Asses... HEY! I have a QUINCUNX that represents 5 UNCIA!

    :D For @dougsmith: It may be ugly, but it be FIVE...Uncia
    upload_2018-7-28_19-49-20.png
    RR Anon 210 BCE AE 23 Quincunx 6.96g Apollo P behind Dioscuri Luceria 5 pellets Craw 99-4 Syd 309 Sear 910 Very Rare
     
  6. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    I have a son and mother pentassarion as well..Forntuna reverse.

    102_4362_zpsaf38a7a1.jpg
     
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  7. tenbobbit

    tenbobbit Well-Known Member

    Not sure if I have posted this before, apologies if I have.
    Same type as RC's coin with maybe an Obverse die match, the Reverse has the end of the legend in the fields though.
    IMG_4985.JPG IMG_4986.JPG
     
  8. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Nice coin, @Andres2 ! I have one that is similar, but issued five years later, dated TR P XX COS IIII, RIC 289c:

    Caracalla Serapis Denarius.jpg

    Wow, @zumbly ! Lovely coin with a gorgeous patina and interesting reverse type. Now I need to get one of those serpent-entwined tree types!

    Provincials may not be your strong suit, @Alegandron , but you picked a winner with that Serapis! The god's image on the reverse of your Didumenian and Macrinus from Marcianopolis is very well-rendered.

    Nice one, @chrsmat71 ! That's a nicely-preserved example, too. I like Domna's pensive portrait on the obverse.

    Yes, @tenbobbit , that's an obverse die-match to my example. If you look at the letters in the inscription, you can see they are completely superimposable:

    Caracalla and Domna Marcianopolis Homonoia obv die match.jpg

    This is probably the die described in Pick (AMNG 1, p. 226) as having the M and N in ΔΟΜΝΑ tied together, such that the final downstroke of the M is also the first downstroke of the N. This is the example in Vienna (#5) he cites as "Wien Froelich 4 tentam. 261, 133 Abb. d.":

    20180729_045406.jpg

    You'll also note Pick describes the reverse die (with ΩΝ in the field) used on your coin as being used in examples 3 (Neapel Cat. 6294) and 4 (Sophia).

    Pick is very helpful and, while I have a print copy, it is available online here: Vol. I, part 1 and part 2.
     
  9. tenbobbit

    tenbobbit Well-Known Member

    Thanks for the extra info RC, unfortunately this is where I fail miserably due to my lack of computer skills.
    I can just about get by with my limited ability but advanced searches are beyond me.
    Still at the " fingers " background stage of PC skills :confused:
     
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  10. Gavin Richardson

    Gavin Richardson Well-Known Member

    2744665E-ECEB-4099-BC36-C684B829D73A.jpeg Not a full Serapis, just his head.
     
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