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MA Legionary Denarii Numbers 20 and 21
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<p>[QUOTE="Bing, post: 2855993, member: 44132"]Here are my two latest MA legionary Denarii. With these additions I now have representations of 21 of Mark Anthony's legions. I wish I had a good resource of information about each legion. I could find precious little about these legions on the internet, but perhaps I am looking in the wrong places. If anyone here has a good resource you could recommend, I'b be very grateful if you would share it.</p><p><br /></p><p>First, is a rather common legion, Legio X. As someone pointed out in another thread, these are hard to find well centered and mine is no exception.</p><p><br /></p><p>Legio X Equestris (Tenth mounted legion), a Roman legion, was levied by Julius Caesar in 61 BC when he was the Governor of Hispania Ulterior. The Tenth was the first legion levied personally by Caesar and was consistently his most trusted. The name Equestris was applied after Caesar mounted legionaries from the Tenth on horses as a ruse in a parley with the German King Ariovistus in 58 BC because he did not trust his Gallic cavalry auxiliaries from the Aedui tribe. Legio X was famous in its day and throughout history because of its portrayal in Caesar's Commentaries and the prominent role the Tenth played in his Gallic campaigns. Its soldiers were discharged in 45 BC. Its remnants were reconstituted, fought for Mark Antony and Octavian, disbanded, and later merged into X Gemina.</p><p>[ATTACH=full]679059[/ATTACH] </p><p>MARCUS ANTONIUS</p><p>AR Denarius </p><p>OBVERSE: ANT AVG III VIR R P C, Praetorian galley, thyrsos behind prow </p><p>REVERSE: LEG X, legionary eagle between two standards </p><p>Patrae 32-31 BC </p><p>3.8g, 17mm </p><p>Cr 544/24; Sydenham 1228; RSC 38</p><p>ex. Marti Classical Numismatics</p><p> </p><p>The second coin represents Legio XVIII LYBICAE. I could find no real information regarding this legion or it's name other than the following:</p><p><br /></p><p>The Eighteenth was founded in 41 or 40 BCE, after the battle of Philippi . Its founder may have been Caesar's heir Octavian, who needed new units to put an end to Sextus Pompeius' occupation of Sicily, which put the grain supply of Rome into peril. The first generation of soldiers may have consisted of veterans of the army of Brutus and Cassius; inscriptions suggests that other recruits came from northern Italy.</p><p><br /></p><p>When Pompeius was defeated, Octavian and his fellow-triumvir Mark Antony fell out and started a war, which culminated in the naval battle off Actium where Octavian defeated Anthony. </p><p><br /></p><p>The possibility that the eighteenth legion is identical to the eighteenth legion Lybica of Marc Antony, can not be excluded, but is less likely than the theory that this unit was founded by Octavian.</p><p><br /></p><p>In 30 or 14 BCE, veterans were settled in the Veneto, which suggests that the recruits were from Gallia Cisalpina.</p><p>[ATTACH=full]679060[/ATTACH] </p><p>MARCUS ANTONIUS</p><p>AR Denarius </p><p>OBVERSE: ANT AVG III VIR R P C, Praetorian galley, thyrsos behind prow </p><p>REVERSE: LEG XVIII LYBICAE, legionary eagle between two standards </p><p>Patrae 32-31 BC </p><p>3.5g, 18mm </p><p>Cr544/11, Syd 1240</p><p>ex. Marti Classical Numismatics</p><p> </p><p>So, once again, if you can refer me to a good resource for information on these legions, I would be in your debt.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Bing, post: 2855993, member: 44132"]Here are my two latest MA legionary Denarii. With these additions I now have representations of 21 of Mark Anthony's legions. I wish I had a good resource of information about each legion. I could find precious little about these legions on the internet, but perhaps I am looking in the wrong places. If anyone here has a good resource you could recommend, I'b be very grateful if you would share it. First, is a rather common legion, Legio X. As someone pointed out in another thread, these are hard to find well centered and mine is no exception. Legio X Equestris (Tenth mounted legion), a Roman legion, was levied by Julius Caesar in 61 BC when he was the Governor of Hispania Ulterior. The Tenth was the first legion levied personally by Caesar and was consistently his most trusted. The name Equestris was applied after Caesar mounted legionaries from the Tenth on horses as a ruse in a parley with the German King Ariovistus in 58 BC because he did not trust his Gallic cavalry auxiliaries from the Aedui tribe. Legio X was famous in its day and throughout history because of its portrayal in Caesar's Commentaries and the prominent role the Tenth played in his Gallic campaigns. Its soldiers were discharged in 45 BC. Its remnants were reconstituted, fought for Mark Antony and Octavian, disbanded, and later merged into X Gemina. [ATTACH=full]679059[/ATTACH] MARCUS ANTONIUS AR Denarius OBVERSE: ANT AVG III VIR R P C, Praetorian galley, thyrsos behind prow REVERSE: LEG X, legionary eagle between two standards Patrae 32-31 BC 3.8g, 17mm Cr 544/24; Sydenham 1228; RSC 38 ex. Marti Classical Numismatics The second coin represents Legio XVIII LYBICAE. I could find no real information regarding this legion or it's name other than the following: The Eighteenth was founded in 41 or 40 BCE, after the battle of Philippi . Its founder may have been Caesar's heir Octavian, who needed new units to put an end to Sextus Pompeius' occupation of Sicily, which put the grain supply of Rome into peril. The first generation of soldiers may have consisted of veterans of the army of Brutus and Cassius; inscriptions suggests that other recruits came from northern Italy. When Pompeius was defeated, Octavian and his fellow-triumvir Mark Antony fell out and started a war, which culminated in the naval battle off Actium where Octavian defeated Anthony. The possibility that the eighteenth legion is identical to the eighteenth legion Lybica of Marc Antony, can not be excluded, but is less likely than the theory that this unit was founded by Octavian. In 30 or 14 BCE, veterans were settled in the Veneto, which suggests that the recruits were from Gallia Cisalpina. [ATTACH=full]679060[/ATTACH] MARCUS ANTONIUS AR Denarius OBVERSE: ANT AVG III VIR R P C, Praetorian galley, thyrsos behind prow REVERSE: LEG XVIII LYBICAE, legionary eagle between two standards Patrae 32-31 BC 3.5g, 18mm Cr544/11, Syd 1240 ex. Marti Classical Numismatics So, once again, if you can refer me to a good resource for information on these legions, I would be in your debt.[/QUOTE]
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