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<p>[QUOTE="David Atherton, post: 3228889, member: 82616"]Sometimes a coin can take you down all kinds of research rabbit holes. This is one such coin.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]842705[/ATTACH]<b>Vespasian</b></p><p>Æ25, 9.00g</p><p>Apamea, Phrygia mint, Plancius Varus, magistrate</p><p>RPC 1389 (15 spec.).</p><p>Obv: AYTOKPOTΩP KAIΣAP ΣΕΒΑΣΤΟΣ OYEΣΠΑΣIANOΣ; Head of Vespasian, laureate, r,</p><p>Rev: EΠΙ ΠΛΑNKIOY OYAPOY KOINON ΦPYΓIAΣ ΑΠΑMEIΣ; bundle of five corn-ears</p><p>Acquired from Tom Vossen, October 2018.</p><p><br /></p><p>The important crossroads city of Apamea produced only one issue of coins during the Flavian era for the Koinon of Phrygia. M. Dräger has proposed that the issue could have been struck to help finance the Koinon's recovery after an earthquake, citing an ambiguous remark in Suetonius about Vespasian's civic generosity - '<i>he restored to a better condition very many states throughout the whole world that had been afflicted by earthquakes or fire</i>' (Vesp. 17). It is quite possible that such a disaster occurred during Vespasian's reign in Phrygia since the region is prone to frequent seismic activity. Earthquakes are known to have previously struck the area in 53 and 60 AD and Strabo speaks of such a disaster which rocked the region during the Mithridatic Wars. The issue is undated, but names Plancius Varus, who perhaps is the same person that is recorded as a Flavian legate in Asia during the reign of Vespasian. Varus is thought to have died by 81. The type of five bundled corn-ears echoes a similar reverse of two bundled corn-ears struck by the city under Augustus.</p><p><br /></p><p>Admittedly the connection of this issue to a natural disaster is tenuous at best and cannot be proved definitively one way or the other. At any rate, the city would not produce another coinage until the reign of Hadrian.</p><p><br /></p><p>Feel free to post your 'rabbit hole' or natural disaster coins - or any you feel are relevant.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="David Atherton, post: 3228889, member: 82616"]Sometimes a coin can take you down all kinds of research rabbit holes. This is one such coin. [ATTACH=full]842705[/ATTACH][B]Vespasian[/B] Æ25, 9.00g Apamea, Phrygia mint, Plancius Varus, magistrate RPC 1389 (15 spec.). Obv: AYTOKPOTΩP KAIΣAP ΣΕΒΑΣΤΟΣ OYEΣΠΑΣIANOΣ; Head of Vespasian, laureate, r, Rev: EΠΙ ΠΛΑNKIOY OYAPOY KOINON ΦPYΓIAΣ ΑΠΑMEIΣ; bundle of five corn-ears Acquired from Tom Vossen, October 2018. The important crossroads city of Apamea produced only one issue of coins during the Flavian era for the Koinon of Phrygia. M. Dräger has proposed that the issue could have been struck to help finance the Koinon's recovery after an earthquake, citing an ambiguous remark in Suetonius about Vespasian's civic generosity - '[I]he restored to a better condition very many states throughout the whole world that had been afflicted by earthquakes or fire[/I]' (Vesp. 17). It is quite possible that such a disaster occurred during Vespasian's reign in Phrygia since the region is prone to frequent seismic activity. Earthquakes are known to have previously struck the area in 53 and 60 AD and Strabo speaks of such a disaster which rocked the region during the Mithridatic Wars. The issue is undated, but names Plancius Varus, who perhaps is the same person that is recorded as a Flavian legate in Asia during the reign of Vespasian. Varus is thought to have died by 81. The type of five bundled corn-ears echoes a similar reverse of two bundled corn-ears struck by the city under Augustus. Admittedly the connection of this issue to a natural disaster is tenuous at best and cannot be proved definitively one way or the other. At any rate, the city would not produce another coinage until the reign of Hadrian. Feel free to post your 'rabbit hole' or natural disaster coins - or any you feel are relevant.[/QUOTE]
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