Juba II was installed as client king of Mauretania by Augustus in 25 BC — not because he had any prior claim to the throne, but because Rome needed a reliable administrator for a territory it didn't want to govern directly. He had been raised in Rome since childhood, paraded in Julius Caesar's triumph as a captive infant, and was by any measure more Roman intellectual than North African king. He married Cleopatra Selene, daughter of Antony and Cleopatra, and ran his court at Caesarea as a center of Hellenistic scholarship.
His coinage reflects that hybrid identity — struck to Roman weight standards but carrying Greek-influenced types, an unusual combination for a provincial mint of this period.
Juba II was installed as client king of Mauretania by Augustus in 25 BC — not because he had any prior claim to the throne, but because Rome needed a reliable administrator for a territory it didn't want to govern directly. He had been raised in Rome since childhood, paraded in Julius Caesar's triumph as a captive infant, and was by any measure more Roman intellectual than North African king. He married Cleopatra Selene, daughter of Antony and Cleopatra, and ran his court at Caesarea as a center of Hellenistic scholarship.
His coinage reflects that hybrid identity — struck to Roman weight standards but carrying Greek-influenced types, an unusual combination for a provincial mint of this period.