JESUS CHRIST Class I Anonymous Ancient 1078AD Byzantine Follis Coin CROSS i48301

$350.00 $315.00

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SKU: i48301 Category:

Item: i48301

 

Authentic Ancient

Coin of:

Byzantine Empire


Anonymous Class
I

Bronze Follis 26mm (5.77 grams)
Struck during the reign of Nicephorus III – 24 March 1078 – 4 April 1081 A.D.
Reference: Sear 1889
Bust of
Christ
facing, wearing nimbus crown, pallium and colobium, and raising
right hand in beneditcion,
in left hand, the book of Gospels, IC to left, XC to right; within border.
Latin
cross
, with X at center, and globule and two pellets at each extremity; in
lower field,
on either side, floral ornament; in uppper field, on either side, crescent.

For more than a century, the production of Follis denomination Byzantine coins
had religious Christian motifs which included included
Jesus Christ, and even Virgin Mary. These coins were designed to honor Christ
and recognize the subservient role of the Byzantine emperor, with many of the
reverse inscriptions translating to “Jesus Christ King of Kings” and “May Jesus
Christ Conquer”. The Follis denomination coins
were the largest bronze denomination coins issued by the Byzantine empire, and
their large size, along with the Christian motif make them a popular coin type
for collectors. This series ran from the period of Byzantine
emperors John I (969-976 A.D.) to Alexius I (1081-1118 A.D.). The accepted
classification was originally devised by Miss Margaret Thompson with her study
of these types of coins. World famous numismatic
author, David R. Sear adopted this classification system for his book entitled,
Byzantine Coins and Their Values. The references about this coin site Mr. Sear’s
book by the number that they appear in that work.  The class types of coins
included
Class A1,
Class A2,
Class B,
Class C,
Class D,
Class E,
Class F,
Class G,
Class H,
Class I,
Class J,
Class K. Read more and see examples of these coins by reading the
JESUS CHRIST
Anonymous Class A-N Byzantine Follis Coins Reference.

Click here to see all the Jesus Christ Anonymous Follis coins for sale.

Click here to see all coins bearing Jesus Christ or related available for sale.

You are bidding on the exact

item pictured, provided with a Certificate of Authenticity and Lifetime

Guarantee of Authenticity.

Jesus of Nazareth (c. 5 BC/BCE – c. 30 AD/CE), also
referred to as Jesus Christ or simply Jesus, is the central figure
of
Christianity
. Most
Christian denominations
venerate him as
God the
Son

incarnated
and believe that he
rose from the dead
after being
crucified
.


Half-length portrait of younger man with shoulder-length hair and beard, with right hand raised over what appears to be a red flame. The upper background is gold. Around his head is a golden halo containing an equal-armed cross with three arms visible; the arms are decorated with ovals and squares.

The
principal sources of information regarding Jesus are the four

canonical gospels
, and most
critical scholars
find them, at least the

Synoptic Gospels
, useful for reconstructing Jesus’ life and
teachings. Some scholars believe apocryphal texts such as the

Gospel of Thomas
and the
Gospel according to the Hebrews
are also
relevant
.

Most critical historians agree that Jesus was a
Jew
who was regarded as a teacher and
healer
, that he
was baptized
by

John the Baptist
, and
was crucified
in
Jerusalem
on the orders of the
Roman Prefect

Judaea,

Pontius Pilate
, on the charge of
sedition
against the Roman Empire
. Critical Biblical scholars and
historians have offered competing descriptions of Jesus as a self-described
Messiah,
as the leader of an apocalyptic movement, as an itinerant sage, as a charismatic
healer, and as the founder of an independent religious movement. Most
contemporary scholars of the

Historical Jesus
consider him to have been an independent,
charismatic founder of a Jewish restoration movement, anticipating an imminent
apocalypse. Other prominent scholars, however, contend that Jesus’ “Kingdom
of God
” meant radical personal and social transformation instead of a
future apocalypse.

Christians traditionally believe that Jesus was
born of a virgin
:529–32
performed
miracles
,:358–59
founded
the Church
,
rose from the dead
, and
ascended
into
heaven,:616–20
from which he
will return
.:1091–109
Most Christian scholars today present Jesus as the awaited Messiah promised in
the
Old Testament
and as God, arguing that he fulfilled many Messianic
prophecies of the Old Testament
. The majority of Christians
worship Jesus as the incarnation of God the Son, one of three divine persons of
a reject Trinitarianism
Trinity, wholly or partly,
believing it to be non-scriptural.


Nikephoros III Botaneiates, Latinized as Nicephorus III Botaniates
(Greek:
Νικηφόρος Βοτανειάτης, c. 1002 – 10
December 1081) was
Byzantine

emperor
from 1078 to 1081. He belonged to a
family which claimed descent from the Byzantine
Phokas family
.File:Meister der Predigtsammlung des Heiligen Johannes Chrysostomus 001.jpg

Early career

Nikephoros Botaneiates had served as general from the reign of
Constantine IX
. Drawn to politics, he had been
an active participant in the uprising that brought
Isaac I
to the throne in 1057, including a
prominent role in the
Battle of Petroe
. Although considered a
competent general, he had suffered a number of humiliating setbacks throughout
his career. In 1064, he, together with
Basil Apokapes
,

doux
of
Paradounavon
, defended the
Balkan
frontiers against the invading
Oghuz Turks
, but was defeated and suffered the
humiliation of being taken captive. However, the outbreak of an epidemic soon
began decimating the Turks and the prisoners were recovered, while the survivors
were quickly recruited in the
Byzantine army
.

In 1067, he had been considered as a possible husband for the empress
Eudokia Makrembolitissa
, widowed wife of
Constantine X, but she eventually set her heart on
Romanos IV Diogenes
. Excluded from Romanos’s
campaign at
Manzikert
, he retired to his estates in
Anatolia
. Eventually, under
Michael VII Doukas
, he became
strategos
of the
Anatolic theme
and commander of the troops in
Asia Minor
. Here he participated in the
shambolic acts that crippled the empire’s eastern provinces, including his
strategic retreat when
Caesar John Doukas
was confronting
Norman
mercenary rebels, resulting in the
humiliating defeat of the Byzantine army, and the capture of John Doukas.

In 1078 he revolted against Michael VII and his finance minister
Nikephoritzes
, and with the support of the
Seljuk Turks
who provided him with valuable
troops he marched upon
Nicaea
, where he proclaimed himself emperor. In
the face of another rebellious general,
Nikephoros Bryennios
, his election was ratified
by the aristocracy and clergy, while Michael VII abdicated and became a monk. On
24 March 1078, Nikephoros III Botaneiates entered Constantinople in triumph and
was crowned by
Patriarch Kosmas I of Constantinople
. With the
help of his general
Alexios Komnenos
, he
defeated
Bryennios and other rivals, but failed
to clear the invading Turks out of
Asia Minor
.

Reign

To solidify his position, on the death of his second wife Nikephoros III
sought to marry
Eudokia Makrembolitissa
, the mother of
Michael VII and the widow of
Constantine X
and Romanos IV. This plan was
undermined by the
Caesar

John Doukas
, and Nikephoros instead married
Maria of Alania
. They married in contravention
of church canons, as Maria was still at that time, the wife of Michael VII who
had entered the monastery of Stoudios. Nevertheless, Nikephoros did not
recognize the succession rights of Maria’s son
Constantine Doukas
, while his plan to promote
his worthless nephew Synadenos as co-emperor exposed him to the suspicion and
plots of the surviving portions of the Doukas faction at court. Nikephoros’
administration did not win him much support, as his favored courtiers alienated
much of the older court bureaucracy and failed to stop the devaluation of the
Byzantine currency.

Almost immediately, the uprisings began. Apart from the discontent of the
Byzantine aristocracy, several
Armenian
princes in Asia Minor attempted to
establish their independence from the empire. Two
Paulician
leaders launched their own rebellion
in Thrace
, in a brutal religious conflict that was
not easily suppressed. Consequently, Nikephoros became increasingly dependent on
the support of Alexios Komnenos, who successfully defeated the rebellion of
Nikephoros Basilakes
in the Balkans (1079) and
was charged with containing that of
Nikephoros Melissenos
in Anatolia (1080). The
Byzantine Empire also faced foreign invasion, as the
Norman
Duke
Robert Guiscard
of Apulia declared war under
the pretext of defending the rights of young Constantine Doukas, who had been
engaged to Robert’s daughter Helena. As Alexios was entrusted with substantial
armed forces to combat the impending Norman invasion, the Doukas faction, led by
the Caesar John, conspired to overthrow Nikephoros and replace him with Alexios.
Failing to secure the support of either the
Seljuk Turks
or Nikephoros Melissenos (both
parties being his traditional enemies), Nikephoros III was forced to abdicate in
favour of the Komnenos dynasty, to which he was connected through the engagement
of his grandson to the daughter of Alexios’s older brother Manuel. The deposed
emperor retired into the
monastery that he had endowed
and died later
the same year.

Nikephoros III
in fiction

Nicephorus III is also a fictional
Byzantine Emperor
ruling in the beginning of
the 14th century in
Harry Turtledove
‘s
alternate history
novel
Agent of Byzantium
.


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