Here is a denarius issued by Q. Servilius Caepio Brutus (this is Marcus Junius Brutus using his adopted name) during his year as moneyer in 54 BC. After siding with Pompey (in spite of the fact that Pompey had killed his father) in the civil war, Brutus was pardoned by Julius Caesar, but proving as disloyal to Caesar as he was to the memory of his father, he would play a leading role in the events of the Ides of March. this Denarius issued under Brutus in 54 BC shows the bust of Lucius Junius Brutus, who according to Livy expelled the last King of Rome in 509 BC and from whom the latter Brutus claimed descent. On the reverse is Caius Servilius Ahala, who also took part in a political assassination and from whom Brutus claimed maternal descent. This coin is SR-398 and RSC Junia 30. I doubt I’ll ever own an EID MAR Denarius, so this will have to do. If you have a Brutus please show it.
Great coin @Aethelred . Wonderful Brutus portrait. I like the dual ancestor type with Brutus and Ahala. It is amazing how much the L.J. Brutus portrait on your coin looks like the statue in the Capitoline museum popularly thought to show him. I just posted my Brutus example yesterday as my #5 of my Top 10 for the year and it is currently kicking some butt in the voting. People love a good liberator.
that is a sought after one!...i have one of his cousin, who was in Caesar's will..Decimus Junis Brutus Albinus.....
I’d probably put that coin in every post I made, what a beauty and it is hard to imagine a more historically important coin!