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| 正面铭文 | 登录 以查看详情 |
| 背面描述 | Apollo standing to the right, his right hand raised and extended over his head in a gesture of divination or salutation. A bow rests against a tree trunk around which a serpent is entwined, positioned to the god's left. The reverse field is encircled by a Greek legend naming the provincial governor Caecilius Maternus and the issuing city of Marcianopolis. The composition reflects the syncretic religious iconography common to provincial coinage of the Antonine and Severan periods in Moesia Inferior. |
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| 背面铭文 | ΗΓ ΚΑΙΚ ΜΑΤΕΡΝοΥ ΜΑΡΚΙΑΝΟΠΟΛΕΙΤΩΝ (Translation: during the governorship of Caecilius Maternus, [Coin] of the Marcianopolitans) |
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| 铸币厂 | 登录 以查看详情 |
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| 附加信息 |
Marcianopolis, founded by Trajan and named for his sister Marciana, became one of the more prolific bronze-issuing civic mints in Moesia Inferior during the Antonine and Severan periods. The magistrate name preserved in the obverse legend — Maternus — helps anchor this piece within the sequence of local governors whose tenures structured the city's coinage, though the precise chronology of individual magistracies in this province remains only partially resolved by scholarship.
The ΗΓ control mark denotes the third of a series of denominations struck at Marcianopolis, with the triassarion being a three-assaria bronze common to the Danubian civic mints.