This denarius belongs to the coinage struck in the name of Augustus during the civil war year of 69 AD — the Year of the Four Emperors — almost certainly by a military mint traveling with one of the competing forces rather than by any established imperial workshop. The RIC attribution places it within the "Caligula to Nero" supplementary group, coins struck posthumously invoking Augustus's authority precisely because that authority was contested and no single claimant yet held it securely.
The VICTORIA P R type had specific propaganda weight in 68–69: invoking the Roman people's victory rather than any emperor's was a deliberate hedge.
This denarius belongs to the coinage struck in the name of Augustus during the civil war year of 69 AD — the Year of the Four Emperors — almost certainly by a military mint traveling with one of the competing forces rather than by any established imperial workshop. The RIC attribution places it within the "Caligula to Nero" supplementary group, coins struck posthumously invoking Augustus's authority precisely because that authority was contested and no single claimant yet held it securely.
The VICTORIA P R type had specific propaganda weight in 68–69: invoking the Roman people's victory rather than any emperor's was a deliberate hedge.