The FELIX ADVENTVS type commemorates an imperial visit — the adventus ceremony being one of Rome's most elaborately staged political rituals, in which the emperor's arrival at a city was treated as a quasi-divine event requiring sacrifice, processions, and public games. For Theodosius I, such ceremonies carried particular weight: he came to the eastern throne in 379 as a Spanish general with no dynastic claim, appointed by Gratian after the catastrophe at Adrianople, and needed the theater of legitimacy that adventus coinage provided.
At 1½ solidi, this is a multiple — struck not for commerce but for donative distribution to high officials or military officers.
The FELIX ADVENTVS type commemorates an imperial visit — the adventus ceremony being one of Rome's most elaborately staged political rituals, in which the emperor's arrival at a city was treated as a quasi-divine event requiring sacrifice, processions, and public games. For Theodosius I, such ceremonies carried particular weight: he came to the eastern throne in 379 as a Spanish general with no dynastic claim, appointed by Gratian after the catastrophe at Adrianople, and needed the theater of legitimacy that adventus coinage provided.
At 1½ solidi, this is a multiple — struck not for commerce but for donative distribution to high officials or military officers.