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Denarius - Pescennius Niger SAECVLI FELICITAS

Features

Issuer Usurpations of Syria (Roman Imperial usurpations)
Ruling authority Pescennius Niger (193-194)
Type Standard circulation coins
Years 193-194
Value Denarius (1)
Currency Denarius, Reform of Augustus (27 BC – AD 215)
Composition Silver
Weight 3.2 g
Diameter 17 mm
Shape Round (irregular)
Technique Hammered
Demonetized Yes
Number
N#
271330
References RIC IV.1# 73B
Harold Mattingly, Edward Allen Sydenham; 1936. The Roman Imperial Coinage / Volume 4.1. Pertinax – Geta and Caracalla (AD 193–217). Spink & Son, London, United Kingdom.
, OCRE# ric.4.pn.73B
Online Coins of the Roman Empire (http://numismatics.org/ocre/)

Obverse

Head of Pescennius Niger, laureate, right.

Script: Latin

Lettering: IMP CAES C PESCEN NIGER IVSTI A

Translation:
Imperator Caesar Caius Pescennius Niger. Iustitia Augusti.
Supreme commander (Imperator), Caesar, Gaius Pescennius Niger. Justice of the emperor (Augustus).

Reverse

Crescent moon and seven stars above.

Script: Latin

Lettering: SAECVLI FELICITAS

Translation:
Saeculi Felicitas.
Age of good fortune.

Mint

Antioch on the Orontes, Syria, modern-day Antakya, Turkey

Comments

Punched at 3 h. - Pescennius Niger (born between 135 and 140 AD) served as a military commander under Commodus. Between 183 and 191 AD, he had already been suffect consul (i.e. moved up) once and had been provincial governor in Syria since 191 AD. There he had himself elevated to Augustus in mid-April 193 AD. In the middle of the year he was declared an enemy of the state and suffered several defeats against Septimius Severus, most recently at Issos in Cilicia at the beginning of 194. At the end of April 194 AD, Pescennius Niger was captured near Antioch and executed.

 

From Commodus to the Severans

 

Marcus Aurelius' elevation of his own son Commodus to Augustus in 177 AD proved to be a mistake. His reign from 180-192 ended with the assassination of Commodus and plunged the country into civil war. The provincial governor of Pannonia Septimius Severus (193-211) was able to assert himself. The rulers who followed him, starting with his son Caracalla (211-217), Elagabalus (218-222), who had to assert himself against Macrinus (217/218 AD), through to Severus Alexander (222-235), legitimised themselves with reference to their Severan origins.

See also

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Date VG F VF XF AU UNC
ND (193-194) 

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