Fleet coinage (Mark Antony)

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The Fleet coinage was a set of bronze coins minted by

Roman empire and formed the basis for the monetary reforms under Augustus. The coinage is also referred to by numismatists as RPC 1 1453-70 and 4092, after their designation in M. H. Crawford
, Roman Republican Coinage (1975).

Description

In 40 BC, the rivals Mark Antony and

Treaty of Brundisium, which assigned the eastern half of the Roman empire to Mark Antony. The fleet coinage was a set of bronze denominations issued to serve as small change for the region under his control. Modern scholars refer to it as the "fleet coinage" because they were minted by three of Antony's fleet prefects, Lucius Calpurnius Bibulus, Lucius Sempronius Atratinus and Marcus Oppius Capito, who are named on the obverse of the issues. There are six denominations, as follows:[1]

Denominations of the Fleet coinage
Obverse design Reverse design Denomination Image
Facing busts of Antony and
Octavia
Two figures riding a chariot pulled by four
hippocamps
, HS Δ
Sestertius (4 asses) RPC 1453
Busts of Antony and Octavian at left, facing bust of Octavia Three ships, a
triskeles
below, Γ
Tressis (3 asses)
Facing busts of Antony and Octavia Two ships, with two hats of the
Dioscuri
above, Β
Dupondius (2 asses) RPC 1455
Jugate busts of Antony and Octavia A ship, with the head of Medusa below, Α
As (12 unciae
)
RPC 1456
Bust of Antony Prow of a ship, S Semis (1/2 as = 6 unciae) RPC 4092
Janiform head (of Antony and Octavian?) Stem of a ship's prow, three dots Quadrans (1/4 as = 3 unciae) RPC 1467

Based on where the coins have been found, it appears that there were three separate mints: one at the

Roman colony of Corinth, which had been founded in 44 BC; one at a coastal city in the Levant; and probably one in Piraeus, the port of Athens.[2]

References

Bibliography