top of page

CARACALLA, as Caesar
AD 193-198

AR Denarius. 3.02g, 18mm

MINTED: Rome mint, AD 210

REF: RIC IV 116a
OBVERSE: ANTONINVS PIVS AVG, laureate head right.
REVERSE: PONTIF TR P XIII COS III, Concordia seated left, holding patera in extended right hand and double cornucopiae in left hand.

 

Provenance:

Acquired from Gitbud-Naumann, Sep 2013


Notes:

Struck on a somewhat irregular, compact flan.  Some light scratches.

A scarce type, with a charming, chubby-cheeked portrait of young Caracalla, who would have been about 8 years old when this coin was struck.  

 

Historical Notes:

Born Lucius Septimius Bassianus, the son of emperor Septimius Severus was later given the name Marcus Aurelius Severus Antoninus when his father sought to associate his family with that of the revered 2nd century emperor, Antoninus Pius. More commonly known as Caracalla (after a type of Germanic cloak that he habitually wore), the 22nd emperor of the Roman Empire was almost nothing like the enlightened Antonine rulers that he was named for, and is best remembered for his numerous ruthless and bloodthirsty acts.

 

Ancient sources like Herodian and Cassius Dio tell us that Caracalla successfully engineered the execution of his father-in-law, the powerful commander of the Imperial guard, Plautianus, in 205, that he later even tried to kill his own father, the emperor. Caracalla also had his own wife Plautilla, whom he loathed, exiled and subsequently strangled. His father's will had made him and his younger brother Geta co-emperors in 211, but before the end of the year, Caracalla managed to have his brother murdered in the arms of their mother, Julia Domna, and forbade her to mourn his death.

 

Caracalla was obsessed with emulating the achievements of Alexander the Great, whom he idolised, and he consciously cultivated a martial, soldierly persona. While the members Senate hated and feared him for his ruthlessness, Caracalla won the favour of the army with donatives, salary increases, and by acting as if he were one of them. In 217, while preparing for a huge invasion of Parthia, Caracalla was assassinated near the eastern city of Carrhae, probably on the orders the Praetorian Prefect Macrinus, who thereafter seized the throne for himself. 

 

Most of Caracalla's adult portraits on coins show a scowling, almost brutish visage of the emperor that the 18th century historian Edward Gibbon called "the common enemy of mankind".

CARACALLA, as Caesar . AD 193-198 . AR Denarius . Spes, Goddess of Hope *scarce*

SKU: 082
S$75.00Price
  • MINOTAUR COINS offers a Lifetime Authenticity Guarantee on all coins purchased.  Any coin determined to be inauthentic can be returned unconditionally and at any time for a full refund.

  • Delivery by Registered Mail within Singapore is FREE for orders $50 and above.  Shipping fees apply only for orders under $50 and for all international orders.

bottom of page