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As - Titus PAX AVGVST S C, Pax

Issuer Roman Imperial Mint
Year 74
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Currency Denarius, Reform of Augustus (27 BC – AD 215)
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Obverse script Latin
Obverse lettering T CAES IMP PON TR P COS III CENS
(Translation: Titus Caesar Imperator, Pontifex [Maximus], Tribunicia Potestate, Consul Tertium, Censor. Titus, Caesar, supreme commander (Imperator), [high] priest, holder of tribunician power, consul for the third time, censor.)
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Additional information

Struck under Vespasian's authority but issued in the name of his son Titus, this as belongs to the propaganda campaign following the sack of Jerusalem in 70 AD. The Flavians needed a legitimizing ideology, and Pax — peace imposed through conquest — was central to it. The Jewish War had filled the treasury and funded an extraordinary building program, coins included.

RIC II.1 750 is a relatively scarce Tiberian-weight as from the early Flavian reorganization of the bronze coinage.

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