Diocletian FORTVNAE REDVCI AVGG NN from Trier

Started by Victor, December 05, 2020, 11:35:13 AM

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Victor

though rated common in RIC, this type is a bit tougher to find than that.

Diocletian
A.D. 298- 299         
25x28mm    8.6g
IMP DIOCLETIANVS P F AVG; laureate head right.             
FORTVNAE REDVCI AVGG NN; Fortuna seated left, holding rudder set on globe in her right hand and cornucopiae in her left; B in left, ✶in right.
In ex. TR
RIC VI Trier 230a

Victor


I had written this one off, but almost three months later, it has arrived from Germany.


Heliodromus

I've had some recent ones come quickly from germany, so it seems they are now using air delivery again, but that one must have been on the boat !

Severus

Does anyone know the significance of the two different Fortuna types or what is conveyed by the difference-- sitting vs standing? The way everything was so consciously and deliberately paired and arranged under Diocletian, I have a hard time thinking it is just for sake of variety.


Heliodromus

The seated or standing Fortuna goes hand-in-hand with the reverse legend :

FORTVNAE REDVCI AVGG NN => seated

FORTVNAE REDVCI CAESS NN => standing

FORTVNAE REDVCI AVGG ET CAESS NN => seated or standing

In other words Fortuna is seated when guiding the augusti's fortune, but standing for the caesars ! Maybe the young upstarts need more guidance ?!

Note that although the seated/standing design goes with the AVGG/CAESS legend, the AVGG/CAESS types were all issued indiscriminately for both the augusti and caesars.

It'd be interesting to look at the history of these types to see if there's any pattern.