Vespasian struck this issue during the consolidation following the Year of the Four Emperors and the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem — the Pax Augusta reverse was a deliberate political message, not a decorative choice. The civil war of 69 AD had left the Roman treasury gutted and the mint system in disarray; Vespasian's early bronze coinage was partly an exercise in restoring public confidence in the currency itself.
The S C authorization mark on bronze and orichalcum issues had, by this point, become largely ceremonial — Senate control over base metal coinage was nominal under Flavian rule.
Vespasian struck this issue during the consolidation following the Year of the Four Emperors and the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem — the Pax Augusta reverse was a deliberate political message, not a decorative choice. The civil war of 69 AD had left the Roman treasury gutted and the mint system in disarray; Vespasian's early bronze coinage was partly an exercise in restoring public confidence in the currency itself.
The S C authorization mark on bronze and orichalcum issues had, by this point, become largely ceremonial — Senate control over base metal coinage was nominal under Flavian rule.