A COPPER AS OF CLAUDIUS: LIBERTAS. ROME, AD 50-54.

A COPPER AS OF CLAUDIUS: LIBERTAS. ROME, AD 50-54.

£375.00

Obverse: TI CLAVDIVS CAESAR AVG P M TR P IMP P P, Bare head of Claudius facing left.

Reverse: LIBERTAS AVGVSTA S C, Libertas standing right, holding pileus and extending left hand.

RIC I 113; BMCRE 204. [Rome, AD 50-54].

Diameter: 30 mm. Weight: 10.3 g.

Ex. Newman family collection.

An exceptional copper As of Claudius, struck towards the end of his reign in Rome, circa AD 50-54. Claudius was born on 1 August 10 BC in Gaul into the Roman imperial family. Tiberius, the second emperor of Rome, was his uncle. Claudius famously suffered from a speech impediment and a prominent limp and was treated with disdain by his family and never considered a viable candidate for future emperor. However, when Tiberius's successor Caligula was assassinated in January AD 41, the Praetorian Guard found Claudius in the palace and acclaimed him as emperor. The senate held out against Claudius for two days, but then accepted him. Relations between Claudius and the senate continued to be difficult, and the new emperor entrusted much of his administration to influential Greek freedmen of low social standing, which in turn alienated the senators. He also heard trials in private, rather than allowing senators to be judged by their peers. Although he lacked a military reputation, the essential attribute of an emperor, in AD 43, Claudius undertook the conquest of Britain. He visited the island for 16 days, to preside over the capture of Colchester, the capital of the new province, and then returned to Rome in triumph. As well as Britain, Claudius added Mauretania, Thrace and Lycia to the Empire. Claudius had two children by his wife Messallina - Britannicus and Octavia. In AD 48, Messallina went through a marriage ceremony with the consul Silius as part of a plot against Claudius. Both were executed. Claudius then married his niece Agrippina the Younger who with her son Domitius, was the only surviving direct descendant of Augustus. Agrippina quickly appointed her own supporters to important positions and persuaded Claudius to adopt Domitius - who took the name Nero - as his son. Claudius died on 13 October 54 AD after being poisoned, probably on the orders of Agrippina who feared Claudius would appoint Britannicus his heir over her son Nero. Nero became Emperor. An exceptional example in superb condition. Perfectly centred with a detailed portrait of the elderly emperor –every hair on his head is visible. The figure of Libertas on the reverse is equally detailed with all the fine details of her translucent drapery visible. A remarkable survivor and certainly worthy of a serious collection.

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