Citronic

Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!

Description: Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR (Silver) Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal! Mother of Severus AlexanderExceptionally Struck Portrait, Scarcer in AU. Julia Mamaea was born on the 14th or 29th of August of an unknown year after 180. She was the second daughter of Gaius Julius Avitus Alexianus and Julia Maesa and a younger sister of Julia Soaemias. Mamaea's first marriage may have been to a former consul, and after his death, she was allowed to retain the senatorial rank, even when she later -during the reign of her uncle Septimius Severus (emperor 193-211) married to an equestrian named Gessius Marcianus. Like Mamaea, he was from Syria (born in Arca), and the marriage may have served to strengthen Severus' power base in the eastern provinces. Mamaea bore him a son named Alexianus, who was probably born on 1 October 208. In 217, Caracalla, who had succeeded Severus, was assassinated; the new emperor was Caracalla's praetorian prefect, Macrinus. Like her mother Julia Maesa and her sister Julia Soaemias, Mamaea was in Syria. She may have played a role during the revolt that was organized by Julia Maesa and resulted in the death of Macrinus and the accession of Soaemias' son Varius Avitus Bassianus, who had already earned some fame as priest of the god Elagabal of Emesa and is, as emperor, usually called Heliogabalus. His reign lasted from 218 to the spring of 222, and was a dramatic failure. At first, the boy-emperor acted with moderation, but after the end of 220, he wanted to introduce the cult of his god, and a reign of terror started that lasted for about a year and a half. In the summer of 221, however, a period of moderation started, when the three ladies of Emesa were able to convince Heliogabalus that he should adopt Mamaea's son Alexianus and make him caesar. To celebrate this, the young caesar changed his name into Severus Alexander - which connected him with Caracalla, who was famous for his admiration of Alexander the Great and was popular among the soldiers. The moderation was not to last. In December 221, it had become apparent that the soldiers loved Severus Alexander and his mother Mamaea and hated Heliogabalus and Soaemias. Grandmother Julia Maesa sided with the youngest of her two grandsons. Still, Heliogabalus was a factor to be reckoned with, and Mamaea made sure that Severus Alexander was permanently guarded. The two young men were both consul in 222, but the emperor had already tried to kill his caesar, and the crisis was deepening. On 11 or 12 March, Heliogabalus and his mother were lynched by the soldiers, and Severus Alexander was proclaimed emperor on the thirteenth. He was still young, and Julia Maesa and Mamaea were firmly in charge. One thing they had learned: if the dynasty was to continue, there was no room for religious experiments. The baetyl of Elagabal, his main cult object, was sent back to Emesa, and Severus Alexander did everything as a Roman emperor was supposed to do. A team of sixteen senators and the praetorian prefect Ulpian, a very famous jurist, offered him advise and made sure that he received a decent, Roman education. This policy had some success: writing a century-and-a-half later, the author of the Historia Augusta was impressed by the contrast between Heliogabalus and Severus Alexander, and he portrayed the two as an oriental devil and a Roman saint. Perhaps the only thing that was not completely according to custom was the prominent role of Julia Mamaea. After the death of her mother Julia Maesa, she exercised real influence, and received the title consors imperii, "partner in rule", which in fact made her the first officially recognized empress of the Roman empire. Marcus Aurelius had offered the same position to Lucius Verus; but no emperor had offered this to a woman. On the other hand, the Romans were not completely unaccustomed to it, because they had appreciated Julia Domna, the remarkably "visible" wife of Severus and mother of Caracalla. Like her aunt, Mamaea received titles like Mater Castrorum ("mother of the camps"; 224) and Mater Senatus ("mother of the Senate; 226). Meanwhile, the east was in great turmoil. In the Parthian Empire, a revolt took place, and in 224, the Persian rebel Pâpak dethroned king Artabanus IV. Two years later, Pâpak's son and successor Ardašir took Ctesiphon, the capital of the Parthian empire. This meant the end of Parthia and the beginning of the Sasanian empire. Ardašir wanted to be called "king of kings", the title that had been used by the Parthian kings and - centuries ago - by the Achaemenid rulers of Persia. A war between Rome and the renewed Persian empire was inevitable, and in 231, Severus Alexander proceeded to the east. When negotiations failed, the Romans invaded Iraq, where Ardašir was forced to retreat and the status quo was restored in 232. In 232/233, the emperor and Julia Mamaea were in Antioch, and next year, the emperor could celebrate his Persian triumph in Rome. Meanwhile, however, the Germanic tribe of the Alamanni, which had once been defeated by Caracalla, had become restless and had destoyed the limes in the Black Forest. Again, Severus Alexander and Julia Mamaea proceeded to the front, and again, they sought a diplomatic solution first - which meant buying off the tribal warriors. The legionaries in Mainz, who belonged to the Twenty-second Legion Primigenia, and the Italian legion that had accompagnied them, II Parthica, understood what this meant: an incentive to the Germanic tribe to continue their aggression, and no additional pay for themselves, because there was no fight. On 21 March 235, they lynched their emperor and his mother. The new emperor was Maximinus, who brought the war to a more satisfying end. The Senate pronounced a damnatio memoriae over Mamaea. Julia Mamaea is known to have had personal contacts with Christian leaders like Origen. Please Check out Our Web Site : antebellumnumismatics. com where you can see many new purchases and other listings. Please reach out to us if you have any questions about any listings you see. *Combined Shipping Available ON ALL Items, Request an Invoice or we will send you one after one business day. Items over 16 oz. or $800 in value must be shipped Priority Mail. Payment on all items is expected within Five Business Days to ensure a timely delivery. Please contact us directly if you need more than Five Business Days to send payment. ALL Precious Metals tested with our own Sigma Metalytics Precious Metal Tester and guaranteed genuine. We Offer A 30-Day No-Questions-Asked Return Policy on Most* items to all our customers! Please message us if you have any questions about our items and we are happy to answer them, as returns can be an inconvenience to both parties. The only exception is when items are damaged, tampered with, or removed from holders. All Bullion or Silver Sales are final as market conditions are constantly changing. Please check out our other listings! We have auctions almost every week so make sure to follow us! Follow our owner on Instagram as well at... antebellum.numismatics ... to see things we buy and are passionate about. At Antebellum Numismatics LLC we try to offer a wide variety of items including graded and ungraded coins from modern to bust series, paper currency, obsolete and confederate currency, exonumia such as civil war and hard times tokens, world coins such as thalers and numismatic medals, and we are always listing interesting items as well as many rare key dates. And many other interesting items like shipwreck recovered coins and ancient coins. Feedback is crucial to us here on EBAY and we kindly ask you to contact us if there are any unforeseen issues before leaving negative feedback and we will be happy to resolve them with you. We pride ourselves on having outstanding customer service. Shipping is by USPS First Class Mail unless package is Fragile or Over $800. All packages over $800 will be sent priority mail in order to be fully insured. Our Insurance Provider is Ship&Insure Inc. All orders will be filled in one business day and shipped out either same business day or the following. International Shipping is through Ebay's Global Shipping Program by default, which may get expensive in some foreign countries. If items are shipped internationally it is the Buyer's Responsibility to pay any import duties or taxes. Coin grading is subjective and all coins can be interpreted differently, so we try to post very large, up close shots of each item we list. And remember to buy the coin and not the holder! Be sure to take a close look and come up with your own opinion! All ungraded coins we offer are authentic and genuine as we ONLY buy from reputable dealers and shows, if there are any discrepancies, we are happy to address them and always offer our 30-Day return policy to all our buyers. We are a family-owned small business and appreciate your business and feedback.

Price: 199.95 USD

Location: Harvest, Alabama

End Time: 2024-10-25T00:15:07.000Z

Shipping Cost: 3.95 USD

Product Images

Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!Roman Empire Julia Mamaea AR Denarius 222-235 AD - NGC AU! Great Eye Appeal!

Item Specifics

Return shipping will be paid by: Seller

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Composition: Silver

Provenance: Ownership History Not Available

Certification Number: 6558658-011

Grade: AU 58

Ruler: Severus Alexander

Certification: NGC

Date: 222-235 AD

Denomination: Denarius

Historical Period: Roman: Imperial (27 BC-476 AD)

Cleaned/Uncleaned: Uncleaned

Year: 235 AD

Era: Ancient

Country/Region of Manufacture: Italy

Recommended

Vespasian Denarius Ancient Roman Empire Silver Coin 75AD Pax Very Fine VF
Vespasian Denarius Ancient Roman Empire Silver Coin 75AD Pax Very Fine VF

$104.50

View Details
Ancient Roman Empire 3 Coin Denarius Pius 138-161 AD  M. Aurelius 161-180 #32646
Ancient Roman Empire 3 Coin Denarius Pius 138-161 AD M. Aurelius 161-180 #32646

$58.00

View Details
Ancient Roman Empire Coin Silver Denarius COMMODUS 177 - 192 AD Authentic #13388
Ancient Roman Empire Coin Silver Denarius COMMODUS 177 - 192 AD Authentic #13388

$47.60

View Details
Hadrian Silver Denarius (AD 117-138) - NGC Grade VF - Roman Coin
Hadrian Silver Denarius (AD 117-138) - NGC Grade VF - Roman Coin

$332.32

View Details
Ancient Roman Empire Coin Silver Denarius Caracalla 211 - 217 AD Authentic#31616
Ancient Roman Empire Coin Silver Denarius Caracalla 211 - 217 AD Authentic#31616

$65.00

View Details
Authentic Ancient Roman Coin | Silver Denarius | Fine Condition, 1700+ Years Old
Authentic Ancient Roman Coin | Silver Denarius | Fine Condition, 1700+ Years Old

$57.00

View Details
27BC -426AD -  Ancient Roman Empire bronze coin - 1 coin
27BC -426AD - Ancient Roman Empire bronze coin - 1 coin

$9.99

View Details
Roman Empire Claudius II Gothicus 268-270 AD AE Antoninianus #KTM10235
Roman Empire Claudius II Gothicus 268-270 AD AE Antoninianus #KTM10235

$15.00

View Details
Genuine Ancient Coin from Roman Empire in Plastic Display Case
Genuine Ancient Coin from Roman Empire in Plastic Display Case

$9.45

View Details
Roman Silver Coin -- Valentinian I Siliqua
Roman Silver Coin -- Valentinian I Siliqua

$133.00

View Details