GRATIAN 378AD Constantinople Authentic Genuine ANCIENT Roman Coin ROMA i99104

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Item: i99104

Authentic Ancient Coin of:


Gratian –
Roman Emperor: 367-383 A.D.
Bronze AE3 17mm (2.58 grams) 
Antioch mint, struck 378-383 A.D.
Reference: RIC IX 50b
 D N 
GRATIANVS P F AVG, Pearl-diademed, draped and cuirassed bust right.
VIRTVS ROMANORVM / Θ/Φ/ANTA, Roma seated facing, head left, holding 
globe and spear.


You are bidding on the exact item pictured, provided with a Certificate 
of Authenticity and Lifetime Guarantee of Authenticity.


In ancient Roman religionn, Roma was a female deity who 
personified the city of Rome and more broadly, the Roman state. “As 
personification, as goddess or as symbol, the name Roma stretches 
from classical Greece to Mussolini’s Fascist propaganda… Roma 
has been seen as a goddess, a whore, a near-saint, and as the symbol of 
civilization itself. She remains the oldest continuous 
political-religious symbol in Western civilization.” Ronald Mellor, 
Introduction, The goddess Roma.

The earliest certain cult 
to dea Roma was established at Smyrna in 195 BCE, probably to 
mark Rome’s successful alliance against Antiochus III. Mellor has 
proposed her cult as a form of religio-political diplomacy which 
adjusted traditional Graeco-Eastern monarchic honours to Republican 
mores: honours addressed to the divine personification of the Roman 
state acknowledged the authority of its offices, Republic and city as 
divine and eternal.

Democratic city-states such as Athens and 
Rhodes accepted Roma as analogous to their traditional cult 
personifications of the demos (ordinary people). In 189 BCE, 
Delphi and Lycia instituted festivals in her honour. Roma as “divine 
sponsor” of athletics and pan-Hellenic culture seems to have dovetailed 
neatly into a well-established and enthusiastic festival circuit, and 
temples to her were outnumbered by her civic statues and dedications. In 
133 BCE Attalus III bequeathed the people and territories of Pergamon to 
Rome, as to a trusted ally and protector. The Pergamene bequest became 
the new Roman province of Asia, and Roma’s cult spread rapidly within 
it.

In Hellenistic religious tradition, gods were served by 
priests and goddesses by priestesses but Roma’s priesthood was male, 
perhaps in acknowledgment of the virility of Rome’s military power. 
Priesthood of the Roma cult was competed among the highest ranking local 
elites. In contrast to her putative “Amazonian” Roman original, Greek 
coinage depicts Roma in the “dignified and rather severe style” of a 
Greek goddess, often wearing a mural crown, or sometimes a Phrygian 
helmet. She is occasionally bareheaded. In this and later periods, she 
was often associated with Zeus (as guardian of oaths) and Fides (the 
personification of mutual trust). Her Eastern cult appealed for Rome’s 
loyalty and protection – there is no reason to suppose this as other 
than genuine (and diplomatically sound) respect. A panegyric to her 
survives, in five Sapphic stanzas attributed to Melinno. In Republican 
Rome and its Eastern colonae her cult was virtually non-existent.

Roma was thus absorbed into the earliest (Eastern) form of “Imperial 
cult” – or, from an Eastern viewpoint, the cult to Augustus was grafted 
onto their time-honoured cult to Roma. From here on, she increasingly 
took the attributes of an Imperial or divine consort to the Imperial
divus
, but some Greek coin types show her as a seated or enthroned 
authority, and the Imperial divus standing upright as her 
supplicant or servant.The Imperial cult arose as a pragmatic and 
ingenious response to an Eastern initiative. It blended and “renewed” 
ancient elements of traditional religions and Republican government to 
create a common cultural framework for the unification of Empire as a 
Principate. In the West, this was a novelty, as the Gauls, Germans and 
Celts had no native precedent for ruler cult or a Roman-style 
administration.

The foundation of the Imperial cult centre at 
Lugdunum introduced Roman models for provincial and municipal assemblies 
and government, a Romanised lifestyle, and an opportunity for local 
elites to enjoy the advantages of citizenship through election to 
Imperial cult priesthood, with an ara (altar) was dedicated to 
Roma and Augustus. Thereafter, Roma is well attested by inscriptions and 
coinage throughout the Western provinces. Literary sources have little 
to say about her, but this may reflect her ubiquity rather than neglect: 
in the early Augustan era, she may have been honoured above her living 
Imperial consort.

In the city of Rome itself, the earliest known 
state cult to dea Roma was combined with cult to Venus at the 
Hadrianic Temple of Venus and Roma. This was the largest temple in the 
city, probably dedicated to inaugurate the reformed festival of
Parilia
, which was known thereafter as the Romaea after the 
Eastern festival in Roma’s honour. The temple contained the seated, 
Hellenised image of dea Roma – the Palladium in her right hand 
symbolised Rome’s eternity. In Rome, this was a novel realisation. Greek 
interpretations of Roma as a dignified deity had transformed her from a 
symbol of military dominance to one of Imperial protection and
gravitas
.



Gratian –
Roman Emperor: 367-383 A.D.

367-375 A.D. 
Junior Augustus with
Valentinian I
375-385 A.D. Senior Augustus with
Valentinian II
Ruling in the East:
Valens (364-378 A.D.),
Theodosius I (379-395 A.D.) and
Arcadius (379-395 A.D.)

| Son of
Valentinian I and Severa | Husband of Constantia (daughter of
Constantius II) | Nephew of
Valens | Half-brother of
Valentinian II and Galla (wife of
Theodosius I) |

Gratian (Latin: Flavius Gratianus 
Augustus
; 18 April/23 May 359 -25 August 383) was Roman emperor from 
367 to 383. The eldest son of Valentinian I, during his youth Gratian 
accompanied his father on several campaigns along the Rhine and Danube 
frontiers. Upon the death of Valentinian in 375, Gratian’s brother 
Valentinian II was declared emperor by his father’s soldiers. In 378, 
Gratian’s generals won a decisive victory over the Lentienses, a branch 
of the Alamanni, at the Battle of Argentovaria. Gratian subsequently led 
a campaign across the Rhine, the last emperor to do so, and attacked the 
Lentienses, forcing the tribe to surrender. That same year, his uncle 
Valens was killed in the Battle of Adrianople against the Goths – making 
Gratian essentially ruler of the entire Roman Empire. He favoured 
Christianity over traditional Roman religion, refusing the divine 
attributes of the Emperors and removing the Altar of Victory from the 
Roman Senate.

Life

Gratian was the son of Emperor 
Valentinian I by Marina Severa, and was born at Sirmium (now Sremska 
Mitrovica, Serbia) in Pannonia. He was named after his grandfather 
Gratian the Elder. Gratian was first married to Flavia Maxima 
Constantia, daughter of Constantius II. His second wife was Laeta. Both 
marriages remained childless. His stepmother was Empress Justina and his 
paternal half siblings were Emperor Valentinian II, Galla and Justa.

On 24 August 367 he received from his father the title of Augustus
On the death of Valentinian (17 November 375), the troops in Pannonia 
proclaimed his infant son (by a second wife Justina) emperor under the 
title of Valentinian II.

Gratian acquiesced in their choice; 
reserving for himself the administration of the Gallic provinces, he 
handed over Italy, Illyricum and Africa to Valentinian and his mother, 
who fixed their residence at Mediolanum. The division, however, was 
merely nominal, and the real authority remained in the hands of Gratian.

Gratian’s general Mallobaudes, a king of the Franks, and Naniemus, 
completely defeated the Lentienses, the southernmost branch of the 
Alamanni, in May 378 at the Battle of Argentovaria. Upon receiving news 
of the victory, Gratian personally led a campaign across the Upper Rhine 
into the territory of the Lentienses. After initial trouble facing the 
Lentienses on high ground, Gratian blockaded the enemy instead and 
received their surrender. The Lentienses were forced to supply young men 
to be levied into the Roman army, while the remainder were allowed to 
return home. Later that year, Valens met his death in the Battle of 
Adrianople on 9 August. Valens refused to wait for Gratian and his army 
to arrive and assist in defeating the host of Goths, Alans and Huns; as 
a result, two-thirds of the eastern Roman army were killed as well.

In the same year, the government of the Eastern Empire devolved upon 
Gratian, but feeling himself unable to resist unaided the incursions of 
the barbarians, he promoted Theodosius I on 19 January 379 to govern 
that portion of the Empire. Gratianus and Theodosius then cleared the 
Illyricum of barbarians in the Gothic War (376-382).

For some 
years Gratian governed the Empire with energy and success but gradually 
sank into indolence, occupying himself chiefly with the pleasures of the 
chase, and became a tool in the hands of the Frankish general Merobaudes 
and bishop St. Ambrose of Milan.

By taking into his personal 
service a body of Alans, and appearing in public in the dress of a 
Scythian warrior, after the disaster of the Battle of Adrianople, he 
aroused the contempt and resentment of his Roman troops. A Roman general 
named Magnus Maximus took advantage of this feeling to raise the 
standard of revolt in Britain and invaded Gaul with a large army. 
Gratian, who was then in Paris, being deserted by his troops, fled to 
Lyon. There, through the treachery of the governor, Gratian was 
delivered over to one of the rebel generals, Andragathius, and 
assassinated on 25 August 383.

Empire and Orthodox Christianity

The reign of Gratian forms an important epoch in ecclesiastical history, 
since during that period Nicene Christianity for the first time became 
dominant throughout the empire.

Gratian also published an edict 
that all their subjects should profess the faith of the bishops of Rome 
and Alexandria (i.e., the Nicene faith). The move was mainly thrust at 
the various beliefs that had arisen out of Arianism, but smaller 
dissident sects, such as the Macedonians, were also prohibited.

Suppression of paganism

Gratian, under the influence of his chief 
advisor the Bishop of Milan Ambrose, took active steps to repress pagan 
worship. This brought to an end a period of widespread, if unofficial, 
religious tolerance that had existed since the time of Julian. “In the 
long truce between the hostile camps”, writes historian Samuel Dill “the 
pagan, the sceptic, even the formal, the lukewarm Christian, may have 
come to dream of a mutual toleration which would leave the ancient forms 
undisturbed but such men, living in a world of literary and antiquarian 
illusions, know little of the inner forces of the new Christian 
movement.”

In 382, Gratian appropriated the income of the Pagan 
priests and Vestal Virgins, forbade legacies of real property to them 
and abolished other privileges belonging to the Vestals and to the 
pontiffs. He confiscated the personal possessions of the colleges of 
Pagan priests, which also lost all their privileges and immunities. 
Gratian declared that all of the Pagan temples and shrines were to be 
confiscated by the government and that their revenues were to be joined 
to the property of the royal treasury.

He ordered another removal 
of the Altar of Victory from the Senate House at Rome, despite protests 
of the pagan members of the Senate, and confiscated its revenues. Pagan 
Senators responded by sending an appeal to Gratian, reminding him that 
he was still the Pontifex Maximus and that it was his duty to see that 
the ancestral Pagan rites were properly performed. They appealed to 
Gratian to restore the Altar of Victory and the rights and privileges of 
the Vestal Virgins and priestly colleges. Gratian, at the urging of 
Ambrose, did not grant an audience to the Pagan Senators. Moreover, he 
further renounced the title, office, and insignia of the Pontifex 
Maximus
. Notwithstanding his actions, Gratian was still deified 
after his death.


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Mr. Ilya Zlobin, world-renowned expert numismatist, enthusiast, author and dealer in authentic ancient Greek, ancient Roman, ancient Byzantine, world coins & more.
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YEAR

378-383 AD

CERTIFICATION

Uncertified

COMPOSITION

Bronze

RULER

Gratian

DENOMINATION

AE17

ERA

Ancient

MPN

Uncertified Bronze 0a2feb62-f4c6-

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