The "OB CIVIS SERVATOS" legend — awarded for saving the lives of Roman citizens — refers to the corona civica, the oak-leaf crown granted to Augustus by the Senate in 27 BC as part of the constitutional settlement that formalized his power without the naked appearance of monarchy. It was a calculated piece of political theater: Augustus declined the title of dictator and instead accumulated honorifics, of which this crown was among the most potent, evoking the old Republican tradition of the soldier who shields a fellow citizen in battle.
RIC I 29B belongs to the Spanish mint sequence, most likely Colonia Patricia, active during Augustus's campaigns in the western provinces.
The "OB CIVIS SERVATOS" legend — awarded for saving the lives of Roman citizens — refers to the corona civica, the oak-leaf crown granted to Augustus by the Senate in 27 BC as part of the constitutional settlement that formalized his power without the naked appearance of monarchy. It was a calculated piece of political theater: Augustus declined the title of dictator and instead accumulated honorifics, of which this crown was among the most potent, evoking the old Republican tradition of the soldier who shields a fellow citizen in battle.
RIC I 29B belongs to the Spanish mint sequence, most likely Colonia Patricia, active during Augustus's campaigns in the western provinces.