Titus Quinctius Crispinus Sulpicianus served as one of the tresviri monetales — the three-man minting commission — during the Augustan reorganization of the Roman monetary system in 18 BC, a reform that reinstated the large bronze sestertius after roughly a century of near-absence from Roman coinage. Augustus had effectively dismantled the old Republican minting structure and reconstituted it, retaining the tresviri title as a nod to tradition while concentrating real monetary authority in imperial hands.
Almost nothing survives in the historical record about Crispinus Sulpicianus beyond this office.
Titus Quinctius Crispinus Sulpicianus served as one of the tresviri monetales — the three-man minting commission — during the Augustan reorganization of the Roman monetary system in 18 BC, a reform that reinstated the large bronze sestertius after roughly a century of near-absence from Roman coinage. Augustus had effectively dismantled the old Republican minting structure and reconstituted it, retaining the tresviri title as a nod to tradition while concentrating real monetary authority in imperial hands.
Almost nothing survives in the historical record about Crispinus Sulpicianus beyond this office.