See full images - free registration
Continue with Google - no registration! or register with email

Why register? Just to keep bots out of our catalog. Your email stays private - we will never share it or send you anything uninvited. We guarantee you that!

Æ22 - Antoninus Pius ΕΠΙ Γ ΚΛ ΦΛΑΚΚΟΥ ΕΥΚΑΡΠΕΩΝ

Issuer Eucarpia (Conventus of Apamea)
Year 147-161
Type Log in to see details
Value Log in to see details
Currency Log in to see details
Composition Log in to see details
Weight Log in to see details
Diameter Log in to see details
Thickness Log in to see details
Shape Round (irregular)
Technique Log in to see details
Orientation Log in to see details
Engraver(s) Log in to see details
In circulation to Log in to see details
Reference(s) Log in to see details
Obverse description Log in to see details
Obverse script Greek
Obverse lettering Log in to see details
Reverse description Cybele, the Phrygian mother goddess, seated left upon a throne, wearing a kalathos (cylindrical crown) on her head. She extends her right hand forward holding a patera over a lion seated at her feet to the left, while her left arm rests upon a tympanum (drum). The composition is characteristic of Phrygian civic bronzes honouring the regional cult of Cybele, and the reverse legend in Greek identifies the issuing magistrate and city.
Reverse script Log in to see details
Reverse lettering Log in to see details
Edge Log in to see details
Mint Log in to see details
Mintage Log in to see details
Additional information

Eucarpia was a minor Phrygian city whose civic coinage output was modest even by provincial standards. The magistrate name preserved in the legend — Gaius Claudius Flaccus — follows the Roman onomastic pattern typical of enfranchised Anatolian elites under the Antonines, when the extension of citizenship through the conventus system made such magistracies simultaneously civic honors and instruments of Roman administrative integration in the interior of Asia Minor.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE