Numismatica Ars Classica > Auction 144 with CNG & NGSAAuction date: 8 May 2024
Lot number: 1018

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Lot description:


The Geoffrey Cope Collection of Ancient Greek and Roman Bronzes. The Roman Empire. Time of Tiberius, 14 – 37, in the name of Agrippina Senior, mother of Gaius.
Description
Sestertius, Roma circa 37-41, Æ 36 mm, 28.82g. AGRIPPINA M F MAT C CAESARIS AVGVSTI Draped bust r., hair falling in long plait at the back. Rev. S P Q R / MAEMORIAE / AGRIPPINAE Carpentum drawn l. by two mules; the cover supported by standing figures at each corner, with ornamented side.
Reference
C 1
BMC Gaius 81
RIC Gaius 55
CBN Gaius 129
Condition
Very rare and in exceptional condition for the issue, undoubtedly the finest specimen knownof this issue and one of the finest sestertii to have survived. A coin of enchanting beauty
with a portrait of great elegance and a reverse composition exceptionally detailed
and finely engraved perfectly centred on a large flan and with a wonderful untouched
chocolate brown patina. Good extremely fine / almost Fdc
Provenance
Sotheby's sale 5th July 1995, 100
From the Athos and Dina Moretti collection.

Note:
:
The coin is published in Coin Week (https://coinweek.com/roman-coin-profile-sestertius-of-agrippina-senior/)
Agrippina Senior was among the most deserving, yet least fortunate of the Julio-Claudian women. After her marriage in A.D. 5 to Augustus' preferred heir, Germanicus, she was poised to achieve a status on par with the empress Livia. However, with the death of Augustus and the accession of Tiberius, power within the dynasty shifted decisively from the Julians to the Claudians. Even though Agrippina's marriage offered a union of the two bloodlines, her prospects did not survive under Tiberius. When Germanicus died at Antioch late in A.D. 19 under suspicious circumstances, Agrippina devoted herself to opposing Tiberius and his prefect Sejanus. Finally, in 29, Tiberius deprived her of freedom, and in 33 she died in exile. Three issues of sestertii were struck for Agrippina Senior, all posthumously. The first, produced by her son Caligula, shows on its reverse a carpentum; the second, issued by her brother Claudius, has on its reverse a large SC surrounded by a Claudian inscription; the third is a restoration of the Claudian type by the emperor Titus (79-81), whose inscriptions are substituted for those of Claudius. The obverse inscription on Caligula's issue, AGRIPPINA M F MAT C CAESARIS AVGVSTI, describes Agrippina as the daughter of Marcus (Agrippa) and the mother of Gaius (Caligula). Claudius' inscription also identifies her as Agrippa's daughter, but ends GERMANICI CAESARIS, thus shifting the focus from her being the mother of Caligula to being the widow of Claudius' deceased brother Germanicus. Distinctions in the portraits follow the same lines as the inscriptions: on the issue of Caligula, Agrippina has a slender profile like that of her son, whereas on Claudius' her face is broader and fuller, in keeping with his appearance.

Estimate: 75000 CHF