Faustina Friday – Imperial Wedding Edition

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Roman Collector, Apr 29, 2022.

  1. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    TGIFF, everybody! Today we’ll be talking about a wedding!

    [​IMG]

    Here's some Mendelssohn to get you in the mood.



    Of course, we're not talking about just any wedding, but the marriage of Faustina the Younger to her biological cousin and stepbrother, Marcus Aurelius, which took place in March or May AD 145 at the monument to Concordia in Ostia.[1] This monument had been constructed in response to a senatorial decree within three weeks of Faustina the Elder's death in AD 140.[2] As part of the marriage celebration, vows were undertaken on behalf of the people, first in the name of Marcus Aurelius and then in the name of the deified Faustina I.[3] Coins were struck in gold and bronze with the legend VOTA PVBLICA (vows on behalf of the public) to commemorate these vows.[4]

    I have recently acquired one of these elusive coins for my numophylacium.

    Marcus Aurelius VOTA PVBLICA S C MB.jpg
    Marcus Aurelius, Caesar AD 139-161.
    Roman Æ as or dupondius, 8.74 g, 25.0 mm, 11 h.
    Rome, AD 145.
    Obv: AVRELIVS CAESAR AVG PII F COS, bare head, right.
    Rev: VOTA PVBLICA S C, Faustina Junior, on left, and Marcus Aurelius, on right, standing facing each other, clasping right hands; Concordia standing facing between them, her head turned to left.
    Refs: RIC 1269; BMCRE 1801-02; Cohen 1023; Strack 957; RCV 4851.

    Mine's not exactly FDC,[5] if you know what I mean, so I'll illustrate the corresponding aureus in the British Museum.

    Marcus Aurelius VOTA PVBLICA aureus BMC 611.png
    Aureus of Marcus Aurelius, BMCRE 611. British Museum collection.

    Concordia, here in the context of marital harmony, was an important virtue in Roman marriage, and many coins were issued to honor Concordia in this way. I have written about this in a previous installment of Faustina Friday.

    Faustina's wedding was celebrated not only with these public vows, but with all sorts of pomp, including distributions of grain and money to the people, games opening on 13 May, and an important donative (congiarium) to the soldiers.[6] The donatives almost certainly included a contribution to the Puellae Faustinianae ("Girls of Faustina"), a charitable organization established by Antoninus Pius in honor of his late wife, the Empress Faustina I. Die-linkage studies have established the aurei of Faustina I with the PVELLAE FAVSTINIANAE reverse type were issued simultaneously with other coins struck in commemoration of the wedding of Marcus Aurelius to Faustina II.[7] The Historia Augusta, in addition to noting a donative to the soldiers, tells of a donative to the people at large.[8] Such a congiarium is recorded on coins of Pius dated to AD 145, which show Pius and Liberalitas on a platform distributing coins to a togate male.

    Tablet Pa of the Fasti Ostienses,[9] which chronicles the events of the year AD 145 reads:

    [---]as Annia Faustina M. Aurelio Caesari nupsit. [---
    [imp. A]ntoninus Aug. congiar(ium) dedit (denarios) C. III id. Mai dies promi[ssos]
    [---ed]ere coepit. VII et VI k. Iul. ludi Taurei quinquennales [facti]
    [in] circo Flaminio.​

    Which is translated[10]:

    [On an unknown day] Annia Faustina married Marcus Aurelius Caesar. Imperator Antoninus Augustus gave a congiarium of 100 denarii. On May 13 he began to give the [unknown number of] days of games which had been promised. On June 25 and 26 the ludi Taurei were held in the Circus Flaminius.​

    Do you have any coins celebrating imperial weddings? Please post comments and any coins you feel are relevant!

    ~~~

    Notes


    1. Levick, Barbara. Faustina I and II: Imperial Women of the Golden Age. Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 100.

    2. Levick, op. cit., p. 99, citing Weiss, P. "Die vorbildliche Kaiserehe. Zwei Senatsbeschlüsse beim Tod der älteren und der jüngeren Faustina, neue Paradigmen und die Herausbildung des 'antoninischen' Prinzipats". Chiron 38 (2008), pp. 8-9.

    3. Levick, op. cit., p. 100, citing the Historia Augusta (Pius) 8.1, 10.2.

    4. Beckmann M. "Intra-family Die Links in the Antonine Mint at Rome." Numismatic Chronicle 169 (2009), pp. 208-210. See also Beckmann, Martin. Diva Faustina: Coinage and Cult in Rome and the Provinces. American Numismatic Society, 2012, pp. 52-53.

    5. Laugh all you want, but the few extant examples in European museum collections don't score high on the Sheldon scale, either.

    6. Levick, op. cit., p. 101, citing the Historia Augusta (Pius) 10.2, (Marcus) 6.6, and Fasti Ostienses 13.1.205 about the marriage; about the donative, she cites Van Berchem, D. Les distributions d blé d’argent à la plebe romaine sous l’Empire. Geneva: Université de Genève, 1939 (repr. New York: Arno, 1975), p. 155.

    7. Beckmann (2012), op. cit., pp. 53-55.

    8. Historia Augusta (Pius) 8.1, cited in Beckmann (2012), op. cit., p. 55.

    9. Vidman, Ladislav. Fasti Ostienses. Ceskoslovenska Akademie Ved, 1982, p. 125; cited in Beckmann (2012), op. cit., pp. 51-52.

    10. Beckmann (2012), op. cit., p. 52.
     
    Last edited: May 3, 2022
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  3. thejewk

    thejewk Well-Known Member

    Nice addition RC, it may be a little rough but the style is good and it shows everything that needs to be shown to illustrate the historical relevance.
     
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  4. Spaniard

    Spaniard Well-Known Member

    Nice addition @Roman Collector ...I do like the younger portraits of Aurelius..
    Here's one from his father in law...

    Antoninus Pius (AD 138-161) AR denarius, struck AD 145-161. Rome mint.
    Ob..ANTONINVS AVG PIVS PP,(Antoninus Augustus Pius Father of the people) laureate head right
    Rev..TR POT COS IIII,(Tribune of the people 4 times Consul) Liberalitas standing left, holding abacus and cornucopiae, LIB IIII across the fields.
    RIC #155 type 1
    This coin commemorates Pius' fourth largesse distributed to celebrate the marriage of his daughter Faustina II and Marcus Aurelius Caesar in spring 145 AD

    normal_Antoninus_Pius_White__1_-removebg-preview.png
     
  5. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Thank you for the kind words! It's not about condition or investment potential; it's about history! I'm definitely a "type 1" collector!

    [​IMG]
     
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  6. ambr0zie

    ambr0zie Dacian Taraboste

    Nothing to laugh at this coin. Strong portrait, interesting and uncommon reverse, plenty of details. I would have it my collection without any doubt.
    Probably it had BD in the past but the treatment was successful.
     
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  7. GinoLR

    GinoLR Well-Known Member

    Plautille.jpg
    PROPAGO IMPERI : the wedding of Caracalla and Plautilla...
     
  8. thejewk

    thejewk Well-Known Member

    Oh, me too for sure. You've seen some of the ugly rotters my collection proudly holds haha.

    I think something that was missed in that podcast, understandably considering the fact that it is by a high end auctioneer, is the fact that there is a lot of potential to make profits as a 'type 1' collector, because to be a good collector in more specialised areas than 'high quality, desirable coins' requires a lot of historical and technical knowledge which enables those sorts of collectors to quickly spot things that others would miss. That, however, mostly requires digging through ebay or smaller sellers, not keeping up to date on large auctions.

    Edit: and I missed the main point. It's also far more likely that this imaginary 'type 1' collector would never actually go on to sell the item which they got as bargain pickup, because the reason they got it in the first place is because it fits in their specialist area/s of interest.
     
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  9. ominus1

    ominus1 Well-Known Member

    ...great coin & article RC! :..i look 4ward to your Faustina Fridays :)
     
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  10. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

    Result of that marriage between Marcus Aurelius and Faustina II - 14 children:)

    P1180352ccnbv best.jpg
     
  11. Marsyas Mike

    Marsyas Mike Well-Known Member

    Great post as always, @Roman Collector - I'm especially excited about this post because I've been working on some Antoninus Pius Liberalitas issues, 4th and 5th congiarium/donative. As noted above, the 4th seems to have been the wedding of Faustina II to Marcus Aurelius:

    Similar to the attractive denarius posted by @Spaniard this one has Liberalitas also holding a vexillum - showing that largess was distributed to both citizens and soldiers.

    Antoninus Pius Den LIB IIII May 2019 (0).jpg
    Antoninus Pius Denarius
    (c. 145-147 A.D.) See note.
    Rome Mint

    ANTONINVS AVG [PIVS PP] laureate head right / TR PO-T [COS II]II around, LIB IIII in exergue, Liberalitas standing facing, head left, holding vexillum and cornucopiae.
    RIC 156; BMC 574; RSC 490.
    (3.30 grams / 16 mm)
    eBay May 2019
    Note: "This coin commemorates Antoninus Pius’ 4th congiarium...It is believed that this particular distribution was in celebration of the marriage of Marcus Aurelius to Faustina Jr. in the spring of 145 AD...each citizen was given 90 denarii (or 3 aurei, 15 denarii) and a special additional donative was given to the soldiers."
    Colosseo Collection (describing this aureus, which is stunning):

    Antoninus Pius - Aureus Liberalitas Colosseo on 4th congarium pic.jpg

    https://www.colosseocollection.com/p554191514/hBBF9B348#hbbf9b348
     
  12. Ryro

    Ryro Trying to remove supporter status

    What an EXCELLENT coin! And great write up as always RC:
    200-8.gif
    Here the little lady is flanked by children on my latest Faustina II:
    2728387_1649435002.l.jpg
    And here he is as a young lad:
    2208663_1632938753.l-removebg-preview.png
     
  13. DonnaML

    DonnaML Well-Known Member

    Wonderful post, @Roman Collector!

    First comes love, then comes marriage (or perhaps the reverse in this case), then comes Faustina with a baby carriage (or several of them):

    Faustina II sestertius - Felicitas & six children.jpg

    Plautilla (wife of Caracalla; issued under Septimius Severus), AR Denarius, 203-204 AD, Rome Mint. Obv. Draped bust right, hair in horizontal waves and drawn into large bun at back, PLAVTILLAE AVGVSTAE / Rev. Caracalla standing left, holding volumen with left hand and clasping right hands with Plautilla standing right, PROPAGO IMPERI. Short hairline flan crack. RIC IV (Caracalla) 362, RSC III (Plautilla) 21, Sear RCV II 7073 (ill.). 18 mm., 3.30 g., 6 h. [First appearance of reverse legend PROPAGO IMPERI, celebrating the hoped-for continuation of the Severan house through the union of Caracalla and Plautilla. Cf. RIC IV 367, showing Pietas (representing Plautilla) on reverse holding child, believed to have been issued to celebrate the 204 AD birth of child who died in infancy.]

    Plautilla denarius - Plautilla & Caracalla reverse.jpg

    Sallustia Orbiana (wife of Severus Alexander) AR Denarius 225-227 AD. Rome mint. Special marriage emission of Severus Alexander, AD 225. Obv: SALL BARBIA ORBIANA AVG, Draped bust right, wearing stephane/ Rev: CONCORDIA AVGG, Concordia seated left, holding patera and double cornucopiae. RIC IV-2 319 (Sev. Alexander); RSC III 1, BMCRE 287 (Sev. Alexander). 19 mm., 3.5 g. Rare.
    jpg version Sallustia Orbiana. Augusta, AD 225-227. AR Denarius.jpg

    Gordian III AR Denarius, 241-242 AD, Rome mint. Obv. Laureate, draped, & cuirassed bust right, IMP GORDIANVS PIVS FEL AVG / Rev. Diana standing facing, head right, holding flaming long torch right with both hands, DIANA LVCIFERA. RIC IV-3 127, RSC IV 69, Sear RCV III 8673 (ill.). 20 mm., 2.7 g., 6 h. (Issued in celebration of marriage of Gordian & Tranquillina, 241 AD. See Sear RCV III 8673 at p. 123.)

    Gordian III-Diana Lucifera denarius jpg.jpg
     
    Last edited: Apr 29, 2022
  14. curtislclay

    curtislclay Well-Known Member

    Donna,

    Gordian's DIANA LVCIFERA type was struck in 240, however, so had nothing to do with his marriage to Tranquillina, which didn't take place until a year later, in 241.

    Of course you and Sear are just following Mattingly, who in RIC (1949), p. 11, took over from Voetter this erroneous dating of Gordian's denarius issue ("Special Marriage Issue of A.D. 141").
     
  15. DonnaML

    DonnaML Well-Known Member

    Thanks. I must say I did wonder what Diana Lucifera -- as opposed to, say, Concordia -- has to do with marriage or marital harmony.
     
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  16. happy_collector

    happy_collector Well-Known Member

    Nice addition and another wonderful post, @Roman Collector!

    Imagine someone holding your coin 2,000 years ago, witnessing the wedding ceremony live in person. :)
     
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  17. beluga

    beluga Member

    as a fan of your posts i was wondering if you would share your personal favorite faustina II coin portrait, and was also curious what you think her best denarius reverse is
     
  18. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    I think this LAETITIA sestertius has a lovely portrait. The empress is mature, about 32 or 33 years of age, and very regal in her stephane. The portrait is of unusually fine style and captures the empress's strength and beauty.

    [​IMG]
    Faustina II, AD 147-175.
    Roman orichalcum sestertius, 24.80 g, 32.6 mm, 6 h.
    Rome, late AD 162 – early 163.
    Obv: FAVSTINA AVGVSTA, draped bust right, wearing stephane.
    Rev: LAETITIA S C, Laetitia standing left, holding wreath and scepter.
    Refs: RIC 1653; BMCRE 928; Cohen 150; RCV 5279 var. (bust); MIR 21-6/10b diad.

    In terms of denarius reverse types, my favorite is this scarce VENVS FELIX type, where the goddess holds a statuette of the three graces. I have two examples, one with the empress's type 9 hairstyle, and other with the empress's type 10 hairstyle.

    [​IMG]
    Faustina Jr, Augusta AD 147-175.
    Roman AR Denarius, 3.18 g, 18.2 mm, 6 h.
    Rome, AD 170-175.
    Obv: FAVSTINA AVGVSTA, bare-headed and draped bust, right, with Beckmann type 9 hairstyle.
    Rev: VENVS FELIX, Venus seated left, holding small statuary group of the three graces and scepter.
    Refs: RIC 731 var.; BMC p. 407* accession no. 1982,0202.7; Temeryazev & Makarenko 240; Staal p. 142, p. 169.

    [​IMG]
    Faustina Jr, Augusta AD 147-175.
    Roman AR Denarius, 3.07 g, 17.6 mm, 6 h.
    Rome, AD 170-175.
    Obv: FAVSTINA AVGVSTA, bare-headed and draped bust, right, with Beckmann type 10 hairstyle.
    Rev: VENVS FELIX, Venus seated left, holding small statuary group of the three graces and scepter.
    Refs: RIC 731 var.; BMC p. 407* accession no. 1982,0202.7; Temeryazev & Makarenko 240; Staal p. 142, p. 169.
     
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