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Nummus - Constantius II GLORIA EXERCITVS, Nicomedia

Issuer Roman Imperial Mint, Nicomedia
Year 330-335
Type Standard circulation coin
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Reverse description Two helmeted soldiers standing facing, each clad in military attire and holding a spear in the outer hand and resting the inner hand upon a large grounded shield; between them stands a single legionary standard surmounted by a chi-rho or finial ornament, its shaft decorated with a series of rounded pellets arranged vertically. The reverse legend GLORIA EXERCITVS encircles the design, dedicating the type to the glory of the army. The mint mark SMN∆ appears in the exergue, denoting the Sacred Mint of Nicomedia, fourth officina. The two-standards type distinguishes this issue as belonging to the 330–335 series.
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Mintage ND (330-335) SMNA - Nicomedia, 1st officina -
ND (330-335) SMNS - Nicomedia, 2nd officina -
ND (330-335) SMNΓ - Nicomedia, 3rd officina -
ND (330-335) SMNΔ - Nicomedia, 4th officina -
ND (330-335) SMNε - Nicomedia, 5th officina -
Additional information

The GLORIA EXERCITVS ("Glory of the Army") type was introduced across all active mints simultaneously around 330 AD as a deliberate empire-wide statement following Constantine I's consolidation of sole rule. Nicomedia, then one of the eastern empire's administrative capitals, was a high-output mint during this period, operating multiple officinae concurrently. RIC VII 191 is assigned to the two-standard variety — a distinction that matters for attribution, as the single-standard variant was introduced mid-series and the two types are frequently conflated in older collections.

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