Domitian's fourteen consulships by 88 AD were not incidental — he held the office repeatedly as a calculated assertion of personal authority, tying his image to Roman constitutional tradition while simultaneously undermining it. The COS XIIII designation fixes this issue to a narrow window within his reign, before the increasingly paranoid final years that ended with his assassination in 96 AD and the damnatio memoriae that followed. Much of his coinage was subsequently melted or defaced, which partly explains why well-documented die studies for this series remain incomplete.
Domitian's fourteen consulships by 88 AD were not incidental — he held the office repeatedly as a calculated assertion of personal authority, tying his image to Roman constitutional tradition while simultaneously undermining it. The COS XIIII designation fixes this issue to a narrow window within his reign, before the increasingly paranoid final years that ended with his assassination in 96 AD and the damnatio memoriae that followed. Much of his coinage was subsequently melted or defaced, which partly explains why well-documented die studies for this series remain incomplete.