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| 正面描述 | Laureate bust of Emperor Commodus facing right, depicting him with a short beard, clad in cuirass and paludamentum, the figure presented from a rear three-quarter perspective. The effigy displays the characteristic military regalia befitting an imperial portrait of the Antonine period. The circular Greek legend ΑΥΤΟ ΚΑ ΑΥ ΚΟΜΟΔΟϹ runs around the periphery of the field, identifying the emperor with his abbreviated imperial titulature. The style is consistent with provincial bronze coinage struck under the authority of the Pergamene mint during the reign of Commodus. |
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| 正面文字 | Greek |
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| 背面描述 | 登录 以查看详情 |
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| 附加信息 |
Pergamum's civic coinage under Commodus was intimately tied to the office of the strategos, the annually appointed magistrate whose name appeared on the coin as both a mark of civic pride and personal accountability. Diodoros, named here, held that position during a window when Commodus was consolidating his image as a new Hercules — a theology the emperor imposed on the empire's eastern cities with increasing aggression after 184 AD. Pergamum, as seat of the imperial cult in Asia and home to the great Asclepion, had particular reason to play along carefully.