Seaton Down Hoard coin, nummus commemorating Constantinopolis (coin)
Ownership/credit: RAMM acquired the coins with help from Clinton Devon Estates, Thomson Reuters, Devon County Council and many members of the public. A generous donation by Patrick Long will ensure that the coins are preserved for inspiration and wonder of children.
Ownership/credit: RAMM acquired the coins with help from Clinton Devon Estates, Thomson Reuters, Devon County Council and many members of the public. A generous donation by Patrick Long will ensure that the coins are preserved for inspiration and wonder of children.
Descriptions
A nummus of the type that weighed 1/132 of a pound. It is a single coin from the Seaton Down Hoard made around AD 330-335 in Rome, modern Italy, and issued by the House of Constantine.
Up until the mid 3rd Century AD, almost all of the coinage in Britain was produced in Rome. This changed after the reforms of Diocletian, after which most of Britain’s coinage came from the closer mints of Trier, Arles and Lyon.
It is a commemorative issue coin celebrating the foundation of Constantine I’s brand new capital of the Eastern half of the Empire, with Rome remaining the capital of the West. Constantinopolis later became Byzantium and is now Istanbul in modern Turkey. The front of the coin depicts the personification of Constantinopolis. The image on the reverse depicts Victory, a very common image on coinage, as a symbol of military success. She is easily identifiable by her wings.
This object is on display at RAMM in the Making History gallery.
Inscription
obverse
reverse CONSTANTINOPLE CONSTANTINOPLE
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