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Tremissis - Avitus Cross within a wreath, Mediolanum

Issuer Western Roman Empire
Year 455-456
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Orientation Variable alignment ↺
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Reverse description A plain Latin cross occupies the central field, enclosed within a laurel wreath whose tied binding is visible at the base. The cross, boldly rendered in relief, reflects the Christian symbolism that had become standard on late Roman gold coinage. The wreath is rendered with individual leaves clearly delineated, consistent with the Mediolanum mint style of the period. The reverse field is otherwise blank, with no legend or exergual inscription.
Reverse script Latin
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Additional information

Avitus ruled for barely fourteen months before being deposed by his own generalissimo Ricimer in October 456, stripped of the purple, and compelled into a bishopric. His coinage is accordingly scarce across all mints, but the Mediolanum output is particularly thin — Milan was Ricimer's power base, which makes every tremissis struck there a small bureaucratic artifact of a deeply unstable relationship between an emperor and the man who would shortly end him.

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