Aspurgus secured his position as client king of the Bosporan Kingdom through careful alignment with Rome, and this coin commemorates that relationship explicitly — struck in the year he received formal recognition from Tiberius, it pairs his own image with that of Agrippa, who had died some two decades earlier but remained a potent symbol of Augustan authority and Roman naval power. The posthumous honor accorded to Agrippa here is a political calculation, not sentiment.
The stater's gold content reflects the Bosporan kingdom's access to Pontic trade wealth. Aspurgus would be dead within a few years, leaving a succession crisis that Rome would be forced to arbitrate.
Aspurgus secured his position as client king of the Bosporan Kingdom through careful alignment with Rome, and this coin commemorates that relationship explicitly — struck in the year he received formal recognition from Tiberius, it pairs his own image with that of Agrippa, who had died some two decades earlier but remained a potent symbol of Augustan authority and Roman naval power. The posthumous honor accorded to Agrippa here is a political calculation, not sentiment.
The stater's gold content reflects the Bosporan kingdom's access to Pontic trade wealth. Aspurgus would be dead within a few years, leaving a succession crisis that Rome would be forced to arbitrate.