Denarius of Lucius Verus

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Gam3rBlake, Jul 1, 2021.

  1. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    Although Marcus Aurelius gets all the credit and praise and Verus is kind of forgotten about (like not being included as one of the “Good Emperors” like Marcus Aurelius was), Lucius Verus served as co-Emperor with him so I decided to pick up his denarius as well.

    It seems like Marcus Aurelius also has way more coins of himself than there are of Lucius Verus although I’m not sure if that’s because he was more popular or just because Lucius Verus died before him so there was more time to make coins of Marcus Aurelius than himself.

    Lucius Verus (AD 161-169). AR denarius (18mm, 12h). NGC VF. Rome, December AD 161-December AD 162. IMP L AVREL VERVS AVG, bare head of Lucius Verus right / PROV-DEOR TR P II COS II, Providentia standing facing, head left, globe outward in right hand, cornucopia in left. RIC III (Marcus Aurelius) 482.

    FD75DCD7-6538-4A22-B460-CBFC7D94770D.jpeg
    8222093A-A8B6-4C3B-BC76-CFEB9B9D6D7B.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Jul 1, 2021
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. JayAg47

    JayAg47 Well-Known Member

    Nice one, one of the underrated emperors!
    This one depicts a mourning Armenia after his eastern campaigns.
    Verus.png
    Just imagine if Verus didn't die and outlived Marcus Aurelius, and when Aurelius naturally dies in 180 AD, Verus becomes the sole emperor, and after Verus, his son Lucius takes the job, thus the incompetent Commodus never becomes the emperor, subsequently there'd be no Severan family drama, and who knows even the 3rd century crisis would've been averted!
     
  4. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    One of the great "what ifs" of Roman history.

    Or just imagine if Germanicus had survived and when Tiberius died he became Emperor instead of Caligula.

    Now that would've been a blessing to the Roman Empire.
     
    ambr0zie likes this.
  5. DonnaML

    DonnaML Well-Known Member

    Very nice example! Same type as mine, although on mine the globe is shaped like a pineapple and the cornucopiae looks kind of like a headless crocodile.

    Lucius Verus AR Denarius 161-162 AD. Obv. Bare head right, IMP L AUREL VERVS AVG/ Rev. Providentia standing left holding globe and cornucopiae, PROV DEOR TR P II COS II. RIC III (Marcus Aurelius) 482, RSC II 155. 16 mm., 3.59 g.

    Lucius Verus AR Denarius.jpg
    And here's a didrachm from Caesarea in Cappadocia, with Mt. Argaeus on the reverse:

    Lucius Verus AR Didrachm 161-166 AD, Caesarea, Cappadocia. Obv. Bare head right, ΑΥΤΟΚΡ ΟΥΗΡΟϹ ϹƐΒΑϹΤΟϹ / Rev. Mt. Argaeus (or cult image of same), surmounted by statue of Helios standing three-quarters left with long scepter in left hand and globe in right; flames to left and right on sides of mountain; animal [deer?] bounding left at bottom far left of mountain in front of large rock; tree in front of large rock at bottom far right; smaller rock dotted with trees[?] at bottom center; ΥΠΑ-ΤΟϹ Β [= COS II]. RPC [Roman Provincial Coinage] Online Vol. IV.3 7027 (temp.) [rev. var.] (see https://rpc.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/coins/4/7027); Sydenham 352 [rev. var.] [Sydenham, E., The Coinage of Caesarea in Cappadocia (London 1933)]; Metcalf, Caesarea 131a [rev. var.] [Metcalf, W.E., The Silver Coinage of Cappadocia, Vespasian-Commodus. ANSNNM (American Numismatic Society, Numismatic Notes & Monographs) No. 166 (New York 1996)]; SNG von Aulock 6438 [rev. var.] [Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum, Deutschland, Sammlung Hans Von Aulock, Vol. 2: Caria, Lydia, Phrygia, Lycia, Pamphylia (Berlin 1962)]. 20 mm., 6.70 g., 6 h.

    Lucius Verus Didrachm, Cappadocia (Caesarea), Mt. Argaeus rev., LAC.jpg

    PS: Not that I'm obligated to explain, but in the unlikely event that anyone's noticed that I've hardly been posting lately, I've been quite ill the last couple of weeks, and just haven't had the energy to write anything up. I'm several new Roman Republican coins behind, plus an interesting Alexandrian tetradrachm of Trajan that I ordered from France, with a quadriga of elephants on the reverse. Not in the greatest shape, but I couldn't resist. Maybe by the time it arrives, I'll be feeling better and will be able to post it soon thereafter. Meanwhile, I still try to "like" as many people's posts and comments as I can.
     
  6. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    Nice one Donna! It's pretty cool now we have the same coin ^_^.

    I hope you feel better!
     
    DonnaML likes this.
  7. Shea19

    Shea19 Well-Known Member

    That’s a very nice new addition. Here’s my example of the same type, one of my favorite Imperial portraits in my collection.

    F19ACE80-4B30-452D-BF32-B21AE94C47BD.jpeg

    Lucius Verus, AR Denarius (17 mm, 3.08 g), Rome, 161-162. Bareheaded bust of Lucius Verus to right./Rev. Providentia standing front, holding globe in her right hand and cornucopia with her left. RIC 482 (Marcus Aurelius).

    Also, hoping you feel better soon Donna!
     
    Last edited: Jul 1, 2021
  8. PeteB

    PeteB Well-Known Member

    Wishing you a speedy and complete recovery, Donna!
     
    Orfew and DonnaML like this.
  9. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Very nice addition, @Gam3rBlake! An example of the types of AD 161-163 with the "all round legend." Here's a rather pedestrian denarius of the fellow with a big-nosed but well-preserved bust.

    [​IMG]
    Lucius Verus, AD 161-169.
    Roman AR Denarius, 17 mm, 3.36g, 6h.
    Rome, AD 168.
    Obv: L VERVS AVG ARM PARTH MAX, laureate head right.
    Rev: FORT RED TR P VIII IMP V COS III, Fortuna seated left, holding rudder and cornucopiae.
    Refs: RIC 586; BMC 477; Cohen 111; RCV 5350; MIR 170.
     
  10. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    Very nice example!

    I noticed that they often made big nosed Emperor coins xD

    This Marcus Aurelius denarius has a giant nose too! It’s also very pointy. Like a cartoon.

    ma2.jpg
    C72021E4-DA2F-43EB-ADAB-508FAC0B472C.png
     
    Last edited: Jul 2, 2021
    Orfew, PeteB, Johndakerftw and 3 others like this.
  11. David Atherton

    David Atherton Flavian Fanatic

    Speedy recovery Donna!
     
    Orfew and DonnaML like this.
  12. Finn235

    Finn235 Well-Known Member

    Nice one! Denarii of Verus are common, but command significant premiums I'm high grade compared to the more famous dynasty members. I have two:

    A lovely lifetime denarius
    Lucius verus denarius aequitas.jpg

    A grotty posthumous- he was deified by Marcus Aurelius following his premature death from the Antonine Plague
    Divus verus denarius eagle.jpg
     
  13. ambr0zie

    ambr0zie Dacian Taraboste

    It seems this denarius is quite popular
    upload_2021-7-2_9-51-55.png
    When I started collecting ancient coins I managed to buy 3 lots from an auction. Not all the coins were in best shape, but having 13 denarii that I could identify without doubt was a pleasant surprise.

    I also have this posthumous denarius, one of my favorite coins.

    upload_2021-7-2_9-53-48.png

    Divus Lucius Verus AD 169. Rome
    Denarius AR
    18 mm., 2,70 g.
    RIC III Marcus Aurelius 596B; RSC 55, BMC 503
    Date: AD 169
    Obverse Legend: DIVVS VERVS
    Type: Head of Lucius Verus, bare, right
    Reverse Legend: CONSECRATIO
    Type: Funeral pyre in four tiers, adorned with statues and garlands, quadriga on top
     
  14. gsimonel

    gsimonel Well-Known Member

    Is there room for an As?
    LuciusVerus.JPG
    Bronze As
    Rome mint, A.D. 164-165
    Obv: L VERVS AVG ARMENIACVS
    Rev: LIBERA AVG TR P V IMP II COS II - Liberalitas, standing, facing left, holding abacus and cornucopiae, between S and C
    RIC (Marcus Aurelius) 1416
    24mm, 10.6g.
     
  15. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    Of course! Get 15 more of them and you can have a denarius worth :p
     
    Roman Collector likes this.
  16. Jims Coins

    Jims Coins Well-Known Member

    Silver coin (AR Denarius) minted at Rome during the reign of LUCIUS VERUS in 168 A.D. Obv. L.VERVS.AVG.ARM.PARTH.MAX.: laur. hd. r. Rev. TR.P.VIII.IMP.V.COS.III.: Aequitas seated l., holding scales and cornucopia. RCS #1544. RSCII #318 pg.232. RICIII #595 pg.261. BMC #481. DVM #23/3. RCSVII #5362. CFB-232 OBV.jpg CFB-232 REV.jpg
     
  17. Jims Coins

    Jims Coins Well-Known Member

    Bronze coin (AE as) minted during the reign of LUCIUS VERUS in 163 A.D. Obv. L.VERVS.AVG.ARMENIACVS.: bare hd. r. Rev. TR.P.IIII.IMP.II.COS.III.S.C.: Victory walking l. RCS #1558. RICIII #1392. DVM #46/2.


    CFA-219 OBV.jpg CFA-219 REV.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jul 4, 2021
  18. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

    Nice addition

    Here's my only LV denarius

    0150-210.JPG

    Q
     
  19. Gam3rBlake

    Gam3rBlake Well-Known Member

    Very nice!

    Do you happen to know who the figure is on the reverse sitting down?
     
  20. PeteB

    PeteB Well-Known Member

    Last edited: Jul 4, 2021
    Cucumbor and Roman Collector like this.
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page