Issued in the chaotic opening months of the Flavian dynasty, this denarius belongs to a small group celebrating Vespasian's sons collectively as the emperor's heirs — a deliberate dynastic statement at a moment when the legitimacy of Flavian rule still needed asserting. Vespasian had won the civil war of 69 AD, the Year of the Four Emperors, but consolidating that victory required projecting stability and succession. The joint presentation of Titus and Domitian on coinage served that political purpose directly.
RIC II.1 1404 is among the rarer emissions of the early Flavian period, struck before the mint operations fully stabilized under the new regime.
Issued in the chaotic opening months of the Flavian dynasty, this denarius belongs to a small group celebrating Vespasian's sons collectively as the emperor's heirs — a deliberate dynastic statement at a moment when the legitimacy of Flavian rule still needed asserting. Vespasian had won the civil war of 69 AD, the Year of the Four Emperors, but consolidating that victory required projecting stability and succession. The joint presentation of Titus and Domitian on coinage served that political purpose directly.
RIC II.1 1404 is among the rarer emissions of the early Flavian period, struck before the mint operations fully stabilized under the new regime.