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Aureus - Allectus ADVENTVS AVG, Londinium

Issuer Britannic Empire (Roman splinter states)
Year 293
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Reference(s) RIC V.2#1 , OCRE#ric.5.all.1 , Calicó#4786 , Depey Rom#4/1 , Vagi#2639
Obverse description Laureate, draped, and cuirassed bust of Allectus facing right, rendered in high relief with finely detailed portraiture characteristic of late Roman imperial coinage. The emperor is depicted with a short beard and radiate crown elements visible at the nape, wearing a paludamentum fastened at the right shoulder. The encircling legend runs from lower left to upper right around the bust within a beaded border. The portrait displays the distinctive stylistic traits of the London mint under the Britannic Empire, with strong facial modeling and careful attention to the cuirass decoration.
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Obverse lettering IMP C ALLECTVS P F AVG
(Translation: Emperor and Caesar Allectus, Blessed and Pious)
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Additional information

Allectus seized control of Roman Britain in 293 by murdering Carausius, the former commander he served as finance minister — making him one of the few usurpers in Roman history who toppled another usurper rather than a legitimate emperor. His reign lasted just three years before Constantius I retook the island in 296. The ADVENTVS type, conventionally struck to commemorate an imperial arrival or entry into a province, carries an irony here: Allectus never meaningfully expanded his territory and spent his reign on the defensive.

The Londinium mint attribution is secure. RIC V.2 #1 makes this the opening entry of his coinage — the first classified gold issue of a man who ruled Britain for roughly 1,000 days.

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