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Denarius - Augustus SENAT P Q R, Victory

Issuer Roman Empire (27 BC - 395 AD)
Year 68-69
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Value 1 Denarius
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Obverse description Bare, laureate head of Augustus facing left, rendered in fine portrait style with curling hair beneath the laurel wreath. The legend AVGVSTVS DIVI F encircles the effigy, reading partially around the upper and lower fields. The portrait displays the idealized yet individualized features characteristic of Augustan imperial coinage, with a strong jaw and prominent brow. The flan is slightly irregular, as typical of late Augustan posthumous issues struck during the Year of the Four Emperors.
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Reverse lettering SENAT P Q R
(Translation: Senatus Populusque Romanus. The senate and the Roman people. Clippeus Votivus. Votive shield.)
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Additional information

Struck in the chaotic final months of Nero's reign or the immediate aftermath of his death in June 68 AD, this denarius belongs to a group attributed to uncertain mint activity — possibly Lugdunum — during the Year of the Four Emperors. The SENAT P Q R legend was a deliberate political signal, invoking senatorial authority at a moment when Galba was marshaling legitimacy against the Julio-Claudian order. Whether the Senate actually authorized this coinage or whether the legend was purely rhetorical remains debated among scholars of the period.

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