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<p>[QUOTE="David Atherton, post: 7562502, member: 82616"]How about one from the same series, but of Titus Caesar?</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]1303989[/ATTACH]</p><p><b>Titus as Caesar [Vespasian]</b></p><p>Æ As, 9.35g</p><p>Lyon mint, 77-78 AD</p><p>RIC 1268 (C2). BMC 862, BNC 872. Hendin 1562.</p><p>Obv: T CAES IMP AVG F TR P COS VI CENSOR; Head of Titus, laureate, bearded, r.; globe at point of bust</p><p>Rev: IVDAEA CAPTA; S C in exergue; Palm tree; to r., Judaea std. r.; to l. of tree, arms</p><p>Acquired from GB Collection, March 2019.</p><p><br /></p><p>The importance of the Jewish War to the Flavian dynasty cannot be overestimated. It provided much needed legitimacy for the imperial rule of 'new men'. This common <i>as</i> struck for Titus Caesar nearly eight years after the <i>Gotterdammerung</i> fall of Jerusalem is ample evidence of the dynasty's continued reliance on the propaganda value of 'Judaea Capta'. It would continue to be Titus's calling card even after he became emperor a year or so later. This coin was struck in Lugdunum (Lyon) in a fairly large issue that presumably addressed a shortage of bronze coinage in the Western provinces.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="David Atherton, post: 7562502, member: 82616"]How about one from the same series, but of Titus Caesar? [ATTACH=full]1303989[/ATTACH] [B]Titus as Caesar [Vespasian][/B] Æ As, 9.35g Lyon mint, 77-78 AD RIC 1268 (C2). BMC 862, BNC 872. Hendin 1562. Obv: T CAES IMP AVG F TR P COS VI CENSOR; Head of Titus, laureate, bearded, r.; globe at point of bust Rev: IVDAEA CAPTA; S C in exergue; Palm tree; to r., Judaea std. r.; to l. of tree, arms Acquired from GB Collection, March 2019. The importance of the Jewish War to the Flavian dynasty cannot be overestimated. It provided much needed legitimacy for the imperial rule of 'new men'. This common [I]as[/I] struck for Titus Caesar nearly eight years after the [I]Gotterdammerung[/I] fall of Jerusalem is ample evidence of the dynasty's continued reliance on the propaganda value of 'Judaea Capta'. It would continue to be Titus's calling card even after he became emperor a year or so later. This coin was struck in Lugdunum (Lyon) in a fairly large issue that presumably addressed a shortage of bronze coinage in the Western provinces.[/QUOTE]
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