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<p>[QUOTE="Cucumbor, post: 2273627, member: 4298"]Most of you guys & gals have seen that many times, but the story is so nice, and the opportunity given, I can't resist....</p><p><br /></p><p>"My grand father, born 1894, has been <i>lucky</i> enough to be involved in the whole WWI. He eventually found three coins, romans he told me, while digging a trench at Verdun battle (1916). After the end of the war, being in a train, back home with two other "poilus" he decided he whould give one coin to each of them and keep the last one for himself. Here it is, a Commodus sestertius (and quite a scarce one I dicovered later :</p><p><br /></p><p><img src="http://www.forumancientcoins.com/gallery/albums/userpics/11724/normal_0160-310np_noir.jpg" class="bbCodeImage wysiwygImage" alt="" unselectable="on" /></p><p><br /></p><p>Rome mint, AD 192</p><p><b>L AEL AVREL CO---MM AVG P FEL,</b> Laureate head of Commodusright</p><p><b>HERCVLI ROMANO AVG, </b>Hercules facing, head left, holding club and lion's skin, resting on trophy. <b>SC</b> in field</p><p>21,01 gr</p><p>Ref : RCV #5752, Cohen #203</p><p><br /></p><p>It is the very first roman coin I have ever possessed, as he gave it to me when I was 18 (ahem, that was in 1978) and the only one in the family to collect coins. It's of course the real start of my addiction for ancient coins"</p><p><br /></p><p>I can also add this about that coin :</p><p><br /></p><p>The following commentary is taken from the description of a similar example (in far much better condition) in NAC auction 4, # 477 :</p><p><br /></p><p><i>Few Roman coins excite as much commentary as those of Commodus, which show him possessed of Hercules. Not only do they present an extraordinary image, but they offer incontrovertible support to the literary record. The reports of Commodus’ megalomania and infatuation with Hercules are so alarming and fanciful that if the numismatic record was not there to confirm, modern historians would almost certainly regard the literary record as an absurd version of affairs, much in the way reports of Tiberius’ depraved behaviour on Capri are considered to be callous exaggerations. Faced with such rich and diverse evidence, there can be no question that late in his life Commodus believed that Hercules was his divine patron. Indeed, he worshipped the demigod so intensely that he renamed the month of September after him, and he eventually came to believe himself to be an incarnation of the mythological hero. By tradition, Hercules had fashioned his knotted club from a wild olive tree that he tore from the soil of Mount Helicon and subsequently used to kill the lion of Cithaeron when he was only 18 years old. Probably the most familiar account of his bow and arrows was his shooting of the Stymphalian birds while fulfilling his sixth labour. The reverse inscription HERCVLI ROMANO AVG (‘to the August Roman Hercules’) makes the coin all the more interesting, especially when put into context with those of contemporary coins inscribed HERCVLI COMMODO AVG, which amounts to a dedication ‘to Hercules Commodus Augustus’.</i></p><p><br /></p><p>Q[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Cucumbor, post: 2273627, member: 4298"]Most of you guys & gals have seen that many times, but the story is so nice, and the opportunity given, I can't resist.... "My grand father, born 1894, has been [I]lucky[/I] enough to be involved in the whole WWI. He eventually found three coins, romans he told me, while digging a trench at Verdun battle (1916). After the end of the war, being in a train, back home with two other "poilus" he decided he whould give one coin to each of them and keep the last one for himself. Here it is, a Commodus sestertius (and quite a scarce one I dicovered later : [IMG]http://www.forumancientcoins.com/gallery/albums/userpics/11724/normal_0160-310np_noir.jpg[/IMG] Rome mint, AD 192 [B]L AEL AVREL CO---MM AVG P FEL,[/B] Laureate head of Commodusright [B]HERCVLI ROMANO AVG, [/B]Hercules facing, head left, holding club and lion's skin, resting on trophy. [B]SC[/B] in field 21,01 gr Ref : RCV #5752, Cohen #203 It is the very first roman coin I have ever possessed, as he gave it to me when I was 18 (ahem, that was in 1978) and the only one in the family to collect coins. It's of course the real start of my addiction for ancient coins" I can also add this about that coin : The following commentary is taken from the description of a similar example (in far much better condition) in NAC auction 4, # 477 : [I]Few Roman coins excite as much commentary as those of Commodus, which show him possessed of Hercules. Not only do they present an extraordinary image, but they offer incontrovertible support to the literary record. The reports of Commodus’ megalomania and infatuation with Hercules are so alarming and fanciful that if the numismatic record was not there to confirm, modern historians would almost certainly regard the literary record as an absurd version of affairs, much in the way reports of Tiberius’ depraved behaviour on Capri are considered to be callous exaggerations. Faced with such rich and diverse evidence, there can be no question that late in his life Commodus believed that Hercules was his divine patron. Indeed, he worshipped the demigod so intensely that he renamed the month of September after him, and he eventually came to believe himself to be an incarnation of the mythological hero. By tradition, Hercules had fashioned his knotted club from a wild olive tree that he tore from the soil of Mount Helicon and subsequently used to kill the lion of Cithaeron when he was only 18 years old. Probably the most familiar account of his bow and arrows was his shooting of the Stymphalian birds while fulfilling his sixth labour. The reverse inscription HERCVLI ROMANO AVG (‘to the August Roman Hercules’) makes the coin all the more interesting, especially when put into context with those of contemporary coins inscribed HERCVLI COMMODO AVG, which amounts to a dedication ‘to Hercules Commodus Augustus’.[/I] Q[/QUOTE]
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