ARCADIUS with Spear and Shield & Hand of God 383AD Ancient Roman Coin i54426

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Item: i54426

 

Authentic Ancient 

Coin of:


Arcadius

Roman Emperor
: 383-408 A.D. –

Bronze AE2 23mm (4.18 grams) Antioch mint, circa 383 A.D.
Reference: RIC IX 41b type 4
DN ARCAD-IVS PF AVG, pearl diademed, draped and cuirassed bust right, holding 
spear & shield, hand of God above.
LORIA RO-MANORVM, emperor standing facing holding labarum and resting left hand 
on shield; kneeling captive to left. Mintmark star ANTS.

You are bidding on the exact item pictured, 

provided with a Certificate of Authenticity and Lifetime Guarantee of 

Authenticity.

 

 

Labarum of Constantine I, displaying the “Chi-Rho” symbol above.

The labarum  was a
vexillum
(military standard) that displayed 
the “Chi-Rho” 
symbol

, formed from the first two
Greek letters
of the word “Christ”  

Chi
and
Rho
. It was first used by the
Roman emperor

Constantine I
. Since the vexillum consisted of 
a flag suspended from the crossbar of a cross, it was ideally suited to 
symbolize the
crucifixion
of
Christ
.

Later usage has sometimes regarded the terms “labarum” and “Chi-Rho” as 
synonyms. Ancient sources, however, draw an unambiguous distinction between the 
two.

Vision of Constantine


A coin of Constantine (c.337) showing a depiction of his labarum 
spearing a serpent.

On the evening of October 27, 312, with his army preparing for the
Battle of the Milvian Bridge
, the emperor
Constantine I
claimed to have had a vision 
which led him to believe he was fighting under the protection of the
Christian God
.

Lactantius
states that, in the night before the 
battle, Constantine was commanded in a dream to “delineate the heavenly sign on 
the shields of his soldiers”. He obeyed and marked the shields with a sign 
“denoting Christ”. Lactantius describes that sign as a “staurogram”, or a
Latin cross
with its upper end rounded in a 
P-like fashion, rather than the better known
Chi-Rho
sign described by
Eusebius of Caesarea
. Thus, it had both the 
form of a cross and the monogram of Christ’s name from the formed letters “X” 
and “P”, the first letters of Christ’s name in Greek.

From Eusebius, two accounts of a battle survive. The first, shorter one in 
the
Ecclesiastical History
leaves no doubt that 
God helped Constantine but doesn’t mention any vision. In his later Life of 
Constantine
, Eusebius gives a detailed account of a vision and stresses that 
he had heard the story from the emperor himself. According to this version, 
Constantine with his army was marching somewhere (Eusebius doesn’t specify the 
actual location of the event, but it clearly isn’t in the camp at Rome) when he 
looked up to the sun and saw a cross of light above it, and with it the Greek 
words
Ἐν Τούτῳ Νίκα
. The traditionally employed 
Latin translation of the Greek is
in hoc signo vinces
— literally “In this 
sign, you will conquer.” However, a direct translation from the original Greek 
text of Eusebius into English gives the phrase “By this, conquer!”

At first he was unsure of the meaning of the apparition, but the following 
night he had a dream in which Christ explained to him that he should use the 
sign against his enemies. Eusebius then continues to describe the labarum, the 
military standard used by Constantine in his later wars against
Licinius
, showing the Chi-Rho sign.

Those two accounts can hardly be reconciled with each other, though they have 
been merged in popular notion into Constantine seeing the Chi-Rho sign on the 
evening before the battle. Both authors agree that the sign was not readily 
understandable as denoting Christ, which corresponds with the fact that there is 
no certain evidence of the use of the letters chi and rho as a Christian sign 
before Constantine. Its first appearance is on a Constantinian silver coin from 
c. 317, which proves that Constantine did use the sign at that time, though not 
very prominently. He made extensive use of the Chi-Rho and the labarum only 
later in the conflict with Licinius.

The vision has been interpreted in a solar context (e.g. as a
solar halo
phenomenon), which would have been 
reshaped to fit with the Christian beliefs of the later Constantine.

An alternate explanation of the intersecting celestial symbol has been 
advanced by George Latura, which claims that Plato’s visible god in Timaeus 
is in fact the intersection of the Milky Way and the Zodiacal Light, a rare 
apparition important to pagan beliefs that Christian bishops reinvented as a 
Christian symbol.


Iconographic career under Constantine


Coin of
Vetranio
, a soldier is holding two 
labara. Interestingly they differ from the labarum of Constantine in 
having the Chi-Rho depicted on the cloth rather than above it, and 
in having their staves decorated with
phalerae
as were earlier Roman 
military unit standards.


The emperor 
Honorius
holding a variant of the 
labarum – the Latin phrase on the cloth means “In the name of Christ 
[rendered by the Greek letters XPI] be ever victorious.”

Among a number of standards depicted on the

Arch of Constantine
res publica
INSTINCTV DIVINITATIS 
MENTIS MAGNITVDINE
(“by greatness of mind and by instinct [or impulse] 
of divinity”). As with his predecessors, sun symbolism – interpreted as 
representing
Sol Invictus
(the Unconquered Sun) or
Helios
,
Apollo
or
Mithras
– is inscribed on his coinage, but in 
325 and thereafter the coinage ceases to be explicitly pagan, and Sol Invictus 
disappears. In his
Historia Ecclesiae
Eusebius further reports 
that, after his victorious entry into Rome, Constantine had a statue of himself 
erected, “holding the sign of the Savior [the cross] in his right hand.” There 
are no other reports to confirm such a monument..

Whether Constantine was the first
Christian
emperor supporting a peaceful 
transition to Christianity during his rule, or an undecided pagan believer until 
middle age, strongly influenced in his political-religious decisions by his 
Christian mother
St. Helena
, is still in dispute among 
historians.

Battle of Adrianople the guard of the labarum 
standard were directed to move it to any part of the field where his soldiers 
seemed to be faltering. The appearance of this talismanic object appeared to 
embolden Constantine’s troops and dismay those of Licinius.At the final battle 
of the war, the
Battle of Chrysopolis
, Licinius, though 
prominently displaying the images of Rome’s pagan pantheon on his own battle 
line, forbade his troops from actively attacking the labarum, or even looking at 
it directly.[16]

Constantine felt that both Licinius and
Arius
were agents of Satan, and associated them 
with the serpent described in the
Book of Revelation
(12:9). 
Constantine represented Licinius as a snake on his coins.

Eusebius stated that in addition to the singular labarum of Constantine, 
other similar standards (labara) were issued to the Roman army. This is 
confirmed by the two labara depicted being held by a soldier on a coin of
Vetranio
(illustrated) dating from 350.


Flavius 

Arcadius (377/378–1 May 408) was

Byzantine Emperor

in the Eastern half of the

Roman 

Empire
from 395 until his death.

//

Arcadius was born in 

Hispania

the elder son of

Theodosius I

and

Aelia Flaccilla

, and brother of

Honorius

, who would become a

Western Roman Emperor

. His father declared him an

Augustus
 

and co-ruler for the

Eastern half of the Empire

in January, 383. His younger brother was also 

declared Augustus in 393, for the Western half.

As emperors, Honorius was under the control of the Romanized 

Vandal

magister militum

Flavius 

Stilicho
while Arcadius was dominated by one of his ministers,

Rufinus

. Stilicho is alleged by some to have wanted control of both 

emperors, and is supposed to have had Rufinus assassinated by Gothic mercenaries 

in 395; though definite proof of Stilicho’s involvement in the assassination is 

lacking, the intense competition and political jealousies engendered by the two 

figures compose the main thread of the first part of Arcadius’ reign. Arcadius’ 

new advisor, the eunuch

Eutropius

, simply took Rufinus’ place as the power behind the Eastern 

imperial throne.

Arcadius was also dominated by his wife

Aelia 

Eudoxia
, who convinced her husband to dismiss Eutropius, who was holding the 

consulate, at the height of his power, in 399. That same year, on the 13th July, 

Arcadius issued an edict ordering that

all remaining non-Christian temples should be immediately demolishedd

.

Eudoxia’s influence was strongly opposed by

John Chrysostom

, the

Patriarch of Constantinople

, who felt that she had used her family’s wealth 

to gain control over the emperor. Eudoxia used her influence to have Chrysostom 

deposed in 404, but she died later that year. Eudoxia gave to Arcadius four 

children: three daughters,

Pulcheria

Arcadia and Marina, and one son, Theodosius, the future Emperor

Theodosius II

.

Arcadius was dominated for the rest of his rule by

Anthemius

, the

Praetorian Prefect

, who made peace with Stilicho in the West. Arcadius 

himself was more concerned with appearing to be a pious

Christian

than he was with political or military matters, and he died, only 

nominally in control of his empire, in 408.

>

Character and works

In this reign of a weak emperor dominated by court politics, 

a major theme was the ambivalence felt by prominent individuals and the court 

parties that formed and regrouped round them towards

barbarians

which in Constantinople at this period meant

Goths
. In the 

well-documented episode that revolved around

Gainas
, a 

number of Gothic foederati stationed in the capital were massacred, the 

survivors fleeing under the command of Gainas to

Thrace
, where 

they were tracked down by imperial troops and slaughtered and Gainas dispatched. 

The episode has been traditionally interpreted as a paroxysm of anti-barbarian 

reaction that served to stabilise the East. The main source for the affair is a 

mythology à clef by

Synesius
of 

Cyrene, Aegyptus sive de providentia, (400) 

an Egyptianising allegory that embodies a covert account of the events, the 

exact interpretation of which continues to baffle scholars. Synesius’ De 

regno, which claims to be addressed to Arcadius himself, contains a tirade 

against Goths.

A new

forum

was built in the name of Arcadius, on the seventh hill of 

Constantinople, the Xērolophos, in which a

column

was begun to commemorate his ‘victory’ over Gainas (although the 

column was only completed after Arcadius’ death by

Theodosius II

).

The

Pentelic marble

portrait head of Arcadius (illustration) was 

discovered in Istanbul close to the Forum Tauri, in June 1949, in excavating 

foundations for new buildings of the University at

Beyazit

The neck was designed to be inserted in a torso, but no statue, base or 

inscription was found. The

diadem
is a 

fillet with rows of pearls along its edges and a rectangular stone set about 

with pearls over the young emperor’s forehead.


   

    

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