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<p>[QUOTE="ro1974, post: 3163203, member: 73358"]<img src="styles/default/xenforo/clear.png" class="mceSmilieSprite mceSmilie50" alt=":happy:" unselectable="on" unselectable="on" /> where do get the information'</p><p><br /></p><p>This seated Pax is by far the most common type of the 'COS ITER' issue. It may even have been struck well after June 70, evidenced by the vast quantities that have survived and the classic Vespasianic portrait many of them display (Vespasian arrived in Rome c. October 70). COS ITER in the reverse legend is sometimes unusually spaced dependent on where Pax's branch is positioned - here the break occurs between the 'T' and 'E'. Most examples do not have such a break.</p><p><br /></p><p>The seated Pax was struck in such vast numbers so early in Vespasian's reign as a propaganda type to help heal the many wounds after a devastating Civil War and the rebellions in Batavia and Judaea. The restoration of the Roman World was a major theme of the fledgling Flavian dynasty. The coinage announced 'all would be well'.</p><p><br /></p><p>My other example of the type, notice the nice shock of hair on Vespasian. Evidently the engraver did not have a life-like bust of Vespasian to go by. There is no break in COS ITER either.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="ro1974, post: 3163203, member: 73358"]:happy: where do get the information' This seated Pax is by far the most common type of the 'COS ITER' issue. It may even have been struck well after June 70, evidenced by the vast quantities that have survived and the classic Vespasianic portrait many of them display (Vespasian arrived in Rome c. October 70). COS ITER in the reverse legend is sometimes unusually spaced dependent on where Pax's branch is positioned - here the break occurs between the 'T' and 'E'. Most examples do not have such a break. The seated Pax was struck in such vast numbers so early in Vespasian's reign as a propaganda type to help heal the many wounds after a devastating Civil War and the rebellions in Batavia and Judaea. The restoration of the Roman World was a major theme of the fledgling Flavian dynasty. The coinage announced 'all would be well'. My other example of the type, notice the nice shock of hair on Vespasian. Evidently the engraver did not have a life-like bust of Vespasian to go by. There is no break in COS ITER either.[/QUOTE]
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