CARACALLA Thessalonica in Macedonia Rare Nike in Triga Ancient Roman Coin i35210

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SKU: i35210 Category:

Item: i35210
 
Authentic Ancient Coin of:

Caracalla – Roman Emperor: 198-217 A.D. –
Bronze 24mm (8.02 grams) of Thessalonica in Macedonia
Reference: Moushmov 6750
AV K M AVP ANTΩNINOC, Laureate, draped, and cuirassed bust right, seen from  behind.
ΘЄCCAΛONIKЄΩN, Nike, holding wreath, in galloping  triga right; Γ below.

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


 

The city was founded around 315 BC by the King  Cassander of Macedon , on or near the site of the ancient town of Therma and  twenty-six other local villages. He named it after his wife Thessalonike , a half-sister of Alexander the Great . She gained her name (“victory of Thessalians”: Gk nikē “victory”) from her father, Philip II , to commemorate her birth on the day of his gaining a victory over  the Phocians , who were defeated with the help of Thessalian horsemen, the best in Greece at that time. Thessaloniki developed  rapidly and as early as the 2nd  century BC the first walls were built, forming a large square. It was an  autonomous part of the Kingdom of Macedon , with its own parliament where the King was represented and could  interfere in the city’s domestic affairs.

 Roman  era

After the fall of the kingdom of Macedon in 168 BC ,  Thessalonica became a city of the Roman Republic . It grew to be an important trade-hub located on the Via  Egnatia , the Roman road connecting Byzantium   (later Constantinople ), with Dyrrhachium   (now Durrës in Albania ), and  facilitating trade between Europe and Asia. The city became the capital of one  of the four Roman districts of Macedonia; it kept its privileges but was ruled  by a praetor   and had a Roman garrison, while for a short time in the 1st  century BC , all the Greek provinces came under Thessalonica (the Latin form  of the name). Due to the city’s key commercial importance, a spacious harbour  was built by the Romans, the famous Burrowed Harbour (Σκαπτός Λιμήν) that  accommodated the town’s trade up to the eighteenth century; later, with the help  of silt deposits from the river Axios , it was  reclaimed as land and the port built beyond it. Remnants of the old harbour’s  docks can be found in the present day under Odos Frangon Street, near the  Catholic Church.

Thessaloniki’s acropolis ,  located in the northern hills, was built in 55 BC after Thracian raids in the city’s outskirts, for security reasons.

The city had a Jewish colony, established during the first  century , and was to be an early centre of Christianity . On his second missionary journey, Paul of Tarsus , born a Hellenized Israelite, preached in the city’s synagogue,  the chief synagogue of the Jews in that part of Thessaloniki, and laid the  foundations of a church. Other Jews opposed to Paul drove him from the city, and  he fled to Veroia . Paul wrote two of his epistles to the Christian community at Thessalonica, the First Epistle to the Thessalonians and the Second Epistle to the Thessalonians .

Thessaloníki acquired a patron saint, St. Demetrius , in 306. He is credited with a number of miracles that saved  the city, and was the Roman Proconsul   of Greece under the anti-Christian emperor Maximian ,  later martyred at a Roman prison where today lies the Church of St. Demetrius , first built by the Roman sub-prefect of Illyricum Leontios in 463. Other important remains from this period include  the Arch and Tomb of Galerius , located near the centre of the modern city.


Antoninus (Called ‘Caracalla’)
Caesar:  195-198 A.D.
Augustus: 198-217 A.D.
( 198-209 A.D. – with Septimius Severus)
( 209-211 A.D. – with Septimius Severus and Geta)
( 211-217 A.D. – Sole Reign)

Caracalla (April  4, 188 – April 8 , 217.  Caracallus ), born Lucius Septimius Bassianus and later called Marcus  Aurelius Antoninus and Marcus Aurelius Severus Antoninus, was the  eldest son of Septimius Severus and Roman Emperor from 211 to 217. He was one of  the most nefarious of Roman emperors. Caracalla’s reign was notable for:

  • the Constitutio Antoniniana , granting Roman citizenship to freemen throughout the Roman Empire , according to Cassius Dio in order to increase taxation;

  • debasing the silver content in Roman coinage by 25 percent in  order to pay the legions; and

  • the construction of a large thermae outside Rome, the remains of which, known as the Baths of Caracalla , can still be seen today
     

“Caracalla was the common enemy of all mankind,” wrote Edward Gibbon . He spent his reign traveling  from province to province so that each could experience his “rapine and  cruelty.”

Caracalla’s real name was Marcus Aurelius Antoninus. He got the  nickname from his habit of wearing a cloak by the same name. Caracalla was the  elder son of Septimius Severus and brother of Geta whom he positively hated.  Hated so much, in fact, that he had him murdered a few years later. In the  mayhem that followed, Caracalla’s men went on a killing spree of anyone  suspected of being a Geta sympathizer. In the massacre, it’s estimated up to  20,000 people lost their lives. Caracalla would go on to rule for another five  years but his bad karma caught up with him and he was assassinated in a plot  perpetrated by Macrinus.

As an emperor Caracalla possessed few redeeming qualities and among the worst  of them would be his ruinous drain on the treasury. Because he knew everyone  hated him he sought the protection of the army. And the surest way of getting  this protection was to buy it outright. He raised the pay of the solider to  about four denarii per day, nearly quadrupling the salary of just a few years  prior. And on top of their regular salary he heaped endless bonuses and other  concessions meant to endear them. This money could only have come by the  oppressive taxation of ordinary citizens as well as the seizures of property of  the wealthy under trumped-up charges. This not only intensified the hatred  against him but also had the effect of corrupting the military who had become  accustomed to this life of luxury and throwing the economy into lasting  disarray.

Rise to power

Caracalla, of mixed Punic /Berber and Syrian Arab descent, was born Lucius Septimius Bassianus in Lugdunum , Gaul (now Lyon, France ), the  son of the later Emperor Septimius Severus and Julia  Domna . At the age of seven, his name was changed to Marcus Aurelius  Septimius Bassianus Antoninus to solidify connection to the family of Marcus Aurelius . He was later given the Caracalla nickname , which referred to the Gallic hooded tunic he habitually wore  and which he made fashionable.

His father, who had taken the imperial throne in 193, died in  211 while touring the northern marches at Eboracum (York),  and Caracalla was proclaimed co-emperor with his brother Publius Septimius Antoninius Geta . However since both of them wanted to be  the sole ruler, tensions between the brothers were evident in the few months  they ruled the empire together (they even considered dividing the empire in two,  but were persuaded not to do so by their mother). In December 211, Caracalla had  Geta, the family of his former father-in-law Gaius Fulvius Plautianus , his wife Fulvia Plautilla (also his paternal second cousin), and her brother  assassinated. He persecuted Geta’s supporters and ordered a damnatio memoriae by the Senate against his brother.

Reign

In 213 Caracalla went north to the German frontier to deal  with the Alamanni who were causing trouble in the Agri Decumates . The emperor managed to win the sympathy of the soldiers with  generous pay rises and popular gestures, like marching on foot among the  ordinary soldiers, eating the same food, and even grinding his own flour with  them.

Caracalla defeated the Alamanni in a battle near the river Main, but failed to  win a decisive victory over them. After a peace agreement was brokered, the  senate conferred upon him the title “Germanicus Maximus”. In the next year the  emperor traveled to the East.

When the inhabitants of Alexandria heard Caracalla’s claims that he had killed Geta in self-defense,  they produced a satire mocking this claim, as well as Caracalla’s other  pretensions. Caracalla responded to this insult savagely in 215 by slaughtering  the deputation of leading citizens who had unsuspectingly assembled before the  city to greet his arrival, and then unleashed his troops for several days of  looting and plunder in Alexandria. According to historian Cassius Dio, over  20,000 people were killed.

During his reign as emperor, Caracalla raised the annual pay  of an average legionary to 675 denarii and lavished many benefits on the army which he both feared and  admired, as instructed by his father Septimius Severus who had told him to  always mind the soldiers and ignore everyone else. His official portraiture  marked a break with the detached images of the philosopher-emperors who preceded  him: his close-cropped haircut is that of a soldier, his pugnacious scowl a  realistic and threatening presence. The rugged soldier-emperor iconic type was  adopted by several of the following emperors who depended on the support of the  legions, like Trebonianus Gallus .[11]

Seeking to secure his own legacy, Caracalla also commissioned  one of Rome’s last major architectural achievements, the Baths of Caracalla , the largest public bath ever built in ancient Rome. The  main room of the baths was larger than St. Peter’s Basilica , and could easily accommodate over 2,000 Roman citizens  at one time. The bath house opened in 216, complete with private rooms and  outdoor tracks. Internally it was decorated with golden trim and mosaics.

The Roman Empire and its provinces in 210 AD

Fall

While travelling from Edessa to begin a war with Parthia , he  was assassinated while urinating at a roadside near Harran on April 8 , 217 by Julius  Martialis, an officer in the imperial bodyguard. Herodian says that Martialis’ brother had been executed a few days earlier by Caracalla  on an unproven charge; Cassius Dio, on the other hand, says that Martialis was  resentful at not being promoted to the rank of centurion. The escort of the  emperor gave him privacy to relieve himself, and Martialis ran forward and  killed Caracalla with a single sword stroke. He immediately fled on horseback,  but was killed by a bodyguard archer.[  neededcitation]

Caracalla was succeeded by the Praetorian Prefect of the  Guard, Macrinus ,  who almost certainly was part of the conspiracy against the emperor.

His nickname

According to Aurelius Victor in his Epitome de Caesaribus, the cognomen   “Caracalla” refers to a Gallic cloak that Caracalla adopted as a personal fashion, which spread to his army  and his court. Cassius Dio and the Historia Augusta [14] agree that his nickname derived from his cloak, but do not mention its country  of origin.

Caracalla and Geta by Lawrence Alma-Tadema . 1907.

Legendary king of Britain

Geoffrey of Monmouth ‘s legendary History of the Kings of Britain makes Caracalla a king of Britain,  referring to him by his actual name “Bassianus”, rather than the nickname  Caracalla. After Severus’s death, the Romans wanted to make Geta king of  Britain, but the Britons preferred Bassianus because he had a British mother.  The two brothers fought a battle in which Geta was killed, and Bassianus  succeeded to the throne. He ruled until he was betrayed by his Pictish allies  and overthrown by Carausius ,  who, according to Geoffrey, was a Briton, rather than the Menapian Gaul  that he actually was.


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