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Æ19 - Claudius ΑΥΤΟΚΡΑ, L ΙΒ

Issuer Alexandria (Egypt)
Year 51-52
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Composition Bronze
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Reverse description A right hand emerging from the lower field grasping a winged caduceus upright at centre, the staff's wings spread at the top and the serpents entwined about the shaft clearly indicated. The regnal year date appears in the field divided around the central device. The type follows the standard Alexandrian civic reverse programme associating imperial authority with Hermes/Mercury's herald staff.
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Reverse lettering ΑΥΤΟΚΡΑ, L ΙΒ
(Translation: Emperor, of year 12)
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Additional information

Year 12 of Claudius's reign — 51/52 AD — fell just two years before his death, almost certainly by poison, with Agrippina the Younger the primary suspect. Alexandria by this point was the largest mint producing bronze coinage in the Roman East, its output calibrated to local Egyptian reckoning rather than the imperial system, which is why regnal years appear on these coins at all. The L ΙΒ date formula is distinctly Alexandrian, borrowed from Ptolemaic administrative practice and never adopted elsewhere in the Roman provincial series.

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