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Replies: 7 / Views: 2,560 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6130 Posts |
I was going to wait for the "canon" WoR thread to post this, but then I remembered that Flaccilla is the cutoff. So Eudoxia is free game  Aelia Eudoxia Wife of Arcadius AEL EVDO-XIA AVG, Diademed(!) bust right, being crowned by Manus Dei, the Hand of God SALVS REI-PVLICAE, Victory seated right, inscribing Chi-Rho into shield (Looks more like a K on this coin) Can't read the mint... thoughts welcome!   Aelia Eudoxia was born at an uncertain time in the 370s or 380s to Flavius Bauto, the barbarian Magister Militum to Theodosius I. She was orpaned as a child or teenager and moved to Constantinople under the care of Promotus, the Eastern Magister Militum to Theodosius. When Theodosius died, he was succeeded by his weak and ineffectual sons Arcadius and Honorius, neither of whom cared for politics and are probably jointly responsible for the fate of the Roman Empire. Arcadius ruled in the East where he was entirely in the hands of his Magister Militum, Rufinus. Fearful that Rufus might attempt to become emperor, a court eunuch named Eutropius convinced Arcadius to marry Eudoxia in 395. Eudoxia wore the pants in their marriage. She dominated the social functions of her husband's office, even appearing by herself at public functions, which was unheard of at that time. She was a zealous Catholic, and was heavily involved in the persecution of both Pagans and Aryan Christians. She was most likely the driving force behind Arcadius' command to destroy the scant few pagan temples that were still in active use under his domain. While married to Arcadius, she bore five children, including the future emperor Theodosius II and empress Pulcheria who would become the first woman to hold sole and unopposed power over classical Rome during the "interregnum" between Theodosius II and Marcian. Eudoxia died on October 6, 404 following complications of either a miscarriage or stillbirth. I have heard it claimed that all coins of Eudoxia are rare or scarce, but I have my doubts. One interesting thing that Wikipedia notes is that Eudoxia's coins portray her as one would expect an empress regent, not the wife of the Augustus. This was apparently a great annoyance to Honorius, who reportedly started receiving a number of Eudoxia's coins all the way in the West. High grade coins of Eudoxia are rare to be sure, but I have found multiples in uncleaned lots, indicating that at least some types may be common. Eudoxia only issued two types of bronze coins, both AE3. The first is this type, a continuation of a design introduced by her predecessor, empress Aelia Flaccilla. The other depicts the empress enthroned with arms crossed over her breast, receiving the crown from God once again, with the legend GLORIA ROMANORVM.
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2100 Posts |
I only have an old photo of my only example. I must go and find it. It must be sitting in a tray somewhere.... 
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Pillar of the Community
Russian Federation
5177 Posts |
I missed out on a Eudoxia coin once, still mentally kicking myself for it. Did buy what I thought was a Eudoxia coin later (for a similarly low price) - turned out to be the much more common Aelia Flaccilla  still looking for anything of Eudoxia, but it will probably be in the "don't have that kind of money" category (next to Zeno and Magnus Maximus and all the other ludicrous rarities).
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Pillar of the Community
United States
949 Posts |
Thanks for starting this thread, Steve. We had discussed adding her, but never got around to doing it. She and one or two others of the really late Roman ladies deserve inclusion. Great job on that writeup, may I add. I must confess that I have about a half dozen AE3 (some AE4 size) coins of Aelia Eudoxia, all of them pretty grungy, but I have a couple that are less grungy than the rest. Not one of them has a decent portrait of her (I envy both of you guys), but two of these three have reasonable reverses. Bronzes were minted in her name alone in the AE3 module for two reverse types as shown here. During this period the most prolific mint for her apparently was Antioch, but mints were also operated in Constantinople, Nicomedia, Cyzicus, and Alexandria, for both reverse types, except that Alexandria did not produce the Salus reverse. Here are the varieties I can show: Nicomedia or Cyzicus AEL EVDO - XIA AVG Draped bust of Eudoxia nimbate facing r. SALVS REI-PVBLICAE reverse Winged Victory seated r. pointing to Christogram on shield atop pedestal  Exergue: SMNA/SMKA officina 1 I am inclined to attribute this piece to Cyzicus, but cannot rule out Nicomedia if Nicomedia => RIC X 102 if Cyzicus => RIC X 103 Antioch  Exergue: ANT<gamma> officina 3 RIC X 104 Third: AEL EVDO - [XIA AVG] Obverse as above [G]LORIA RO - [MANORVM] Eudoxia enthroned facing with arms crossed, cross in r. field. flan too small for the die.  Exergue: [probably ANT_] if Antioch => RIC X 83
Edited by lrbguy 05/06/2017 1:32 pm
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
6130 Posts |
Nice ones, all!  I didn't win this one (glad I didn't as I won my example with 5 other coins for the same price two weeks later) but I had to share this Eudoxia from Dr. Lanz: http://www.ebay.com/itm/LANZ-ROMAN-...302240257523That reverse type seems to have serious flan size issues, but that is the best Eudoxia portrait I think I have seen outside of gold or silver.
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Moderator
 United States
34430 Posts |
Really interesting coins to me. I especially like the design detail of the crown descending from the heavens!
"If you climb a good tree, you get a push." -----Ghanaian proverb
"The danger we all now face is distinguishing between what is authentic and what is performed." -----King Adz
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Pillar of the Community
United States
949 Posts |
The Lanz coin has a great portrait, but at 13mm it is a serious reduction from an AE3, down to the scale of a late minimus. It is interesting for that as well, but unfortunately has no legends to speak of. Despite his interpretation of the image above her head as "Crowned by the hand of God," I think the RIC understanding has more merit, which simply refers to the figure as "nimbate." That is, the figure is a nimbus, sometimes called halo, but not on account of a perception of holiness. In Latin a nimbus is a cloud, and as an image it refers to the cloud or "aura" of authority that accompanies high royalty. The figure of "Auctoritas" was honored on coins long before this, and that is the usual connotation. That having been said, the New Testament writer, St. Paul, in Romans 13 asserts that all civil authority is given by God, so the Christian perspective is that the power to rule does come from God alone. Whether that is a Divine Right of Kings as a later time saw it, I have my doubts, but I cannot rule out the possibility that by the time of Arcadius the hold of Christianity was firm enough that Auctoritas has given way to "power from on high." Of course, the sense of connection from Emperor to God is not only affirmed in the coinage of Constantine, but well before that in the essence of the Imperial Cult. It is a big subject, and I have not carefully studied it to be sure one way or the other. Anyway, for a good portrait on a full AE3 I just acquired this (though I await delivery, sellers image):  Seller says it's from Nicomedia, but the "N" looks like a "K" to me in the pic - not sure. Maybe we'll see when it arrives.
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
1015 Posts |
Mine isn't that good OBV: AEL EVDO_XIA AVG pearl dia drap bust r, wearing pearl necklace and earrings, hair elaborately weaved with long plait up the back of the head and tucked under diadem, hands of God holding wreath above head rev: SALVS REI_PVBLICAE victory seated r, on cuirass,inscribing Christogram on shield set on column (ANIT)in exergue   cheers
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Replies: 7 / Views: 2,560 |
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