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<p>[QUOTE="ambr0zie, post: 8362559, member: 80952"]Here is one of my favorite designs in my collection.</p><p>[ATTACH=full]1484228[/ATTACH]</p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p>Papius. L. Papius Celsus 45 BC. Rome. Denarius AR. 17 mm, 3,70 g</p><p><br /></p><p>Obv: Head of Juno Sospita right. Border of dots / Rev: L·PAPIVS CELSVS·III·VIR, wolf, right, placing stick on fire; on right, eagle fanning flames . Border of dots.</p><p><br /></p><p>Crawford 472/1; RCV I 461</p><p><br /></p><p>The curious scene depicted on the reverse of this type refers to a foundation myth for the city of Lanuvium, parent city of Rome. According to a legend related by Dionysius of Halicaranassus in Roman Antiquities, the hero Aeneas saw a fire burning in a nearby forest and went to investigate. As he drew closer, he saw the fire was being fed by a she-wolf, who was dropping sticks into the blaze, while an eagle standing nearby fanned it with his wings. A fox kept intruding, trying to snuff out the fire by wetting his tail in a nearby stream and beating the flames down with it, but was driven off by the eagle and wolf. The fox was interpreted as Carthage, trying to snuff out Rome before its flame could burn brightly, while the eagle and she-wolf are symbols of the Roman army and people respectively.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="ambr0zie, post: 8362559, member: 80952"]Here is one of my favorite designs in my collection. [ATTACH=full]1484228[/ATTACH] Papius. L. Papius Celsus 45 BC. Rome. Denarius AR. 17 mm, 3,70 g Obv: Head of Juno Sospita right. Border of dots / Rev: L·PAPIVS CELSVS·III·VIR, wolf, right, placing stick on fire; on right, eagle fanning flames . Border of dots. Crawford 472/1; RCV I 461 The curious scene depicted on the reverse of this type refers to a foundation myth for the city of Lanuvium, parent city of Rome. According to a legend related by Dionysius of Halicaranassus in Roman Antiquities, the hero Aeneas saw a fire burning in a nearby forest and went to investigate. As he drew closer, he saw the fire was being fed by a she-wolf, who was dropping sticks into the blaze, while an eagle standing nearby fanned it with his wings. A fox kept intruding, trying to snuff out the fire by wetting his tail in a nearby stream and beating the flames down with it, but was driven off by the eagle and wolf. The fox was interpreted as Carthage, trying to snuff out Rome before its flame could burn brightly, while the eagle and she-wolf are symbols of the Roman army and people respectively.[/QUOTE]
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