Valentinian II, 375-392 AE2. GLORIA ROMANORVM Emperor in galley left, Victory at helm. 378-388 22 mm. 4:00. 4.75 grams RIC Antioch 40b2 Lovely surfaces with natural highlighting. Excellent portrait. A special coin. [$59] Theodosius AE4. 14 mm. 1.08 grams VICTORIA AVGGG RIC Siscia 39b, Esty type 12 Lovely thick green patina. Superb. A great coin with very high quality. [$29] Valentinian. 364-375. AE3. GLORIA ROMANORVM Emperor right drags captive and holds labarum 364-388 [RIC also lists it in the period 388-392 at Trier] 18 mm. 2.24 grams. RIC Siscia 5, page 146. Lovely even glossy black [$24] There are many more on my page: http://augustusmath.hypermart.net/Valentinian.html I just revised my page on later Roman AE from Valentinian I and later (RIC volumes IX and X). Although the prices were already low, it seems my page does not get much traffic and to sell coins I need to price them really low -- well below anywhere else. So, I dropped many prices a lot. http://augustusmath.hypermart.net/Valentinian.html If you collect coins from the period, please note the large number of major rarities--types rarely seen at all. FELICITAS ROMANORVM and GLORIA ROMANORVM with Victory for Valens. VOT V MVLT X and SPES ROMANORVM for Magnus Maximus. AE2 CONCORDIA AGV [sic] for Theodosius II and for Valentinian III. AE3 VICTORIA AVGGG for Valentinian II. But, for some of you, the best part is the unusually high grade commoner coins. Fill your emperor slots with a lovely high-grade Theodosius II or a beautiful and scarce Arcadius AE3 or a top grade Theodosius or Arcadius AE4. For the rest of you, the best part is the good selection of low-priced late Roman AE.