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Ancient Rome - 37 CE Caligula AR Denarius NGC XF

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SKU
6155519011

We are AUCM are pleased to offer a rare piece from the brief and quite controversial reign of Caligula: 37 AD Caligula AR Denarius graded NGC XF. Struck at Lugdunum mint. Obverse: C CAESAR AVG GERM P M TR POT COS Bare head of Caligula. Reverse: No legend, radiate head of Divus Augustus r. between two stars. With circular engraver's guideline around the portrait of Divus Augustus. "Caligula at first intended to bestow on Tiberius similar honours to those enjoyed by Augustus, but desisted in face of the passive resistance of the Senate. The two stars (on his earliest aurei and denarii) suggest two 'divi', Augustus and (Tiberius)" (Mattingly, BMC I, p. cxliv). Coinarchives.com writes that this coin carries, "an expressively insane portrait" of Caligula. BM-4, Paris-3, C-11 (12 Fr.), RIC-2.

 

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Ancient Rome - 37-41 AD Caligula AR Denarius NGC XF $8,800.

Caligula was very popular. He ended Tiberius' treason trials, paid quite generous bequests to the Roman citizenry and a sizable bonus to the praetorian guard. But six months later he became quite ill. After that he was a very different man. The Roman historian Suetonius tells us that Caligula suffered from epilepsy since childhood. That, or something else, violently changed his state of mind, making him completely irrational, with delusions of grandeur and divinity. Caligula had four wives, and it was said that he had incest with his three sisters. He had difficulty sleeping, getting only a few hours of sleep and having horrible nightmares. He would wander around the palace waiting for sunrise. Caligula had people put to death with no trial.  He ordered an alter to be build to himself, and proposed that statues of himself be placed in synagogues. He introduced new taxes to help pay for his personal projects. In 39 he announced the return of the treason trials, which had terrorized Rome in the last years of Tiberius' rule. He kept his favorite racehorse, Incitatus, inside the palace. Dinner guests were invited in the horse's name, and the horse joined the emperor and guests for dinner. More people were executed, his sisters were banished and he seized their property, and he planned military campaigns in German lands and Britain that never took place. Conspiracies developed to get rid of Caligula. On January 24, 41, three praetorian guardsmen assassinated the unhinged emperor.

 

More Information
Grading Service NGC
Year of Issue NONE
Grade XF40
Ancient Year Range 1-100 AD
Denom Type Ancient
Numeric Denomination AR Denarius
Mint Location NONE
Designation NONE
Circ/UnCirc Circulated
Strike Type Business
Holder Variety Strike 4/5; Surface 2/5 some very miniscule scratches in right obverse field
Grade Add On NONE
Holder Type N/A

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