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Æ19 - Augustus ΛΙΒΙΑΝ ΖΜΥΡΝΑΙΩΝ ΚΟΡΩΝΟϹ

Issuer Smyrna (Conventus of Smyrna)
Year 4-14
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Shape Round (irregular)
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Obverse script Greek
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Reverse description Standing frontal figure of Livia, assimilated to Aphrodite Stratonikis, rendered in full length. She holds a sceptre in her left hand and a Nike figurine in her right hand, while leaning against a column to her right. A dove is depicted to the right of the figure, and a monogram incorporating the letters ΑΠΡ appears to the left. The encircling Greek legend names Livia and identifies the issuing authority as the people of Smyrna, honoring her with a crown.
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Additional information

Issued under the magistrate Coronus — whose name appears in the genitive on the coin — this piece belongs to the civic bronze coinage that Smyrna struck under Augustus while simultaneously cultivating an aggressive imperial cult program. Smyrna had lobbied Rome as early as 195 BC for permission to build a temple to the city of Rome, and under Augustus the city leveraged that long institutional relationship to secure exceptional minting privileges within the Smyrnaean conventus.

RPC I 2469 is among the types linking Livia's name directly to Augustan civic issues, reflecting her unusually prominent public role in the eastern provinces well before her formal deification under Claudius.

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