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| Issuer | Carrhae (Mesopotamia) |
|---|---|
| Year | 193-211 |
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| Shape | Round (irregular) |
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| Reverse script | Greek |
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| Edge | Plain |
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| Additional information |
Carrhae's place in Roman history is almost entirely defined by catastrophe — it was here in 53 BC that Crassus led seven legions into annihilation at the hands of the Parthian cavalry, the worst Roman defeat in a generation. Septimius Severus later campaigned aggressively in Mesopotamia precisely to erase that kind of humiliation, sacking Ctesiphon in 197 AD and reorganizing the region into the new province of Mesopotamia. Carrhae received colonial status under Severus, which explains the ΚΑΡΡΑ ΚΟΛ legend — an abbreviated acknowledgment of that elevation.
At 1.67g this is among the smaller civic bronzes from the colony, consistent with the thin local output typical of newly chartered Mesopotamian mints still establishing their infrastructure.