There must be numerous examples of the subject in a variety of denominations. With the recent acquisition of Nerva mine is finished. I would love to see yours.
Nice set, Expat! I really like that style of Hadrian and will be looking for one in the future. I'll add my own set here (which I've shared before). I would just add the 5, but I don't have an image with just the 5 together. When I redo them, I'll add my more recent Hadrian.
I actually have some embarrassing Nerva's, but I give myself a pass for Nerva: I collect Roman "captives coinage" and, I believe, he is one the very few rulers from Julius Caesar through Leo & Zeno that did not produce any -- either Imperial or Provincial -- including "personifications mourning." (If anyone knows any that are close, please let me know!) Antoninus and Hadrian are tough, too, but I found a way. ---NERVA: N/A TRAJAN: His Dacian campaign was his great achievement. He bragged with a huge, varied series of captives coins. Mine are silver, but they come in gold and bronze and many more variations: Even Trajan's famous architectural types are often about the Dacian conquest. His Column celebrating it, and the Bridge over the River Danube which won him the campaign (kinda). HADRIAN: Had very few captives coins. Aside from the Britannia personifications, only a few specimens are known. I had to go to Alexandria to find one (this one uses an "Armenian captives" reverse type introduced by Trajan). Ex Dattari and ETB Collections: ANTONINUS PIUS: Another hard one. Only the "Britannia mourning" types for Imperial coins (and some Provincials). New, from the "Mentor Collection" (George Muller Estate): MARCUS AURELIUS: Made a big return to captives coinage. Sadly, I've only just begun with him and don't have much that's pretty. Here's an Armenia: COMMODUS (substitute for Nerva): Produced lots of braggadocius captives coinage, but it was all his father's military accomplishments (same for Lucius Verus'), including the Sarmatian and Germanic captives of the Marcomannic Wars pictured here: