Amor was the secret name of Rome

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Victor_Clark, Aug 8, 2024.

  1. Victor_Clark

    Victor_Clark all my best friends are dead Romans Dealer

    Here are some coins from Rome with a curious cryptogram in the mintmark.

    Rome_194.jpg

    Constantine I
    A.D. 320
    19mm 3.6gm
    CONSTANTINVS AVG; helmeted and cuirassed bust right.
    ROMAE AETERNAE [To everlasting Rome, fifteen yearly vows (quindecennalia)] Roma std. r., shield in lap inscribed X/V [note that Victory holds a clear example of a stylus that she used to inscribe the shield]
    in ex. R ЄѠC P
    RIC VII Rome 194


    Licinius_Rome_228.JPG

    Licinius I
    A.D. 320- 312
    18mm 3.0g
    IMP LICINIVS AVG, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right.
    D N LICINI AVGVSTI surrounding wreath enclosing VOT XX.
    In ex. R ЄѠC S
    RIC VII Rome 228


    Part of this mint mark is a cryptogram, and is Greek for eros, which in Latin is amor. Amor and Roma are palindromes-- they read the same backward or forward. Amor was the secret name of Rome. This may have been an attempt by the pagan aristocracy of Rome to use the old religion of mystery and romance to confront the pro-Christian policies of Constantine. The first letter in this mintmark is the Latin letter “R”, for Rome. The next symbol is a ligature, which consists of two Greek letters epsilon and rho, and then an upward sweep which transforms the ligature into the Greek letter omega. What looks like a “C’ is actually the Greek letter sigma. The last letter is a Latin letter which is the officina, and there were four workshops at this time- P, S, T and Q. So, the Greek cryptogram section reads epsilon rho omega sigma or Eros.

    mintmark.jpeg




    temple.jpeg
    This picture shows the close relationship of the temples for Venus and Roma located in Rome.



    The Romans were fond of palindromes, and there is a famous example in Virgil’s Aenid (4:37), where Aeneas said to Dido that the oracle commanded him to go to the land of his “amor”-- which is Roma.

    Sidonius Apollinaris was a Gallo-Roman poet who lived from A.D. 430-480. He was the author of a classic palindrome-- roma tibi subito motibus ibit amor, which roughly translates as "Rome, your love will suddenly collapse in disturbances."



     
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  3. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Those are great, Victor. It isn't a mintmark I have seen before or I just never looked hard enough.
     
    Victor_Clark likes this.
  4. Victor_Clark

    Victor_Clark all my best friends are dead Romans Dealer

    They are fairly rare...all are rated between r3 (4-6 known) and r5 (unique) in RIC.
     
    nerosmyfavorite68 likes this.
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