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Nummus - Constans GLORIA EXERCITVS, Nicomedia

Issuer Roman Imperial Mint
Year 336-337
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Currency Solidus, Reform of Constantine (AD 310/324 – 395)
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Reverse lettering GLOR-IA EXERC-ITVS
(Translation: To the glory of the army.)
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Mint SMN
Nicomedia, Bithynia, modern-day
İzmit, Turkey
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Additional information

The GLORIA EXERCITVS type was introduced around 330 AD as a deliberate propaganda effort to shore up military loyalty during Constantine I's reorganization of the frontier armies. By 336–337, the two-soldier, two-standard variant had already begun transitioning to the single-standard version — a reduction that numismatists use as a rough chronological marker within this sprawling series. The Nicomedia mint, serving as a major administrative center in Bithynia, was among the most productive eastern facilities during this period.

Constans was only around thirteen at the time of striking, not yet holding independent rule — that would come after Constantine I's death in May 337 and the subsequent dynastic massacre that eliminated most rival claimants.

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