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Æ22 - Elagabalus

Issuer Rhesaena (Mesopotamia)
Year 218-222
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Composition Bronze
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Obverse description Laureate bust of Elagabalus (attribution uncertain) facing right, apparently draped in a lion skin and holding a spear, depicted in three-quarter frontal view. The portrait reflects the syncretic iconography associated with Elagabalus, combining imperial and solar-deity attributes. The flan is irregular, consistent with provincial hammered coinage of the eastern Roman Empire.
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Mint Rhesaena, Mesopotamia, Syria
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Additional information

Rhesaena, a garrison town on the Khabur River in northern Mesopotamia, struck coins under Roman imperial authority during a period when the region was perpetually contested between Rome and Parthia — and later Sasanian Persia. Its civic bronzes under Elagabalus are rare survivors from a mint that operated intermittently and left almost no documentary record. The town's strategic position meant its population turned over frequently, and locally struck coinage served short-term administrative needs rather than long-term monetary circulation.

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