Free: Ancient Roman AE Coin - CONSTANTIUS II - Augustus - c.AD350 - The "Anti-Pagan" coin - Antiques - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

FREE: Ancient Roman AE Coin - CONSTANTIUS II - Augustus - c.AD350 - The "Anti-Pagan" coin

Ancient Roman AE Coin - CONSTANTIUS II - Augustus - c.AD350 - The "Anti-Pagan" coin
A member of Listia gave this away for free!
Do you want FREE stuff like this?
Big yes    Big no
Listia is 100% Free to use
Over 100,000 items are FREE on Listia
Declutter your home & save money
La times

"Listia is like EBay, except everything is free" - Los Angeles Times
Techcrunch

"An Awesome Way To Give And Get Free Stuff" - Michael Arrington, TechCrunch
This Stuff is Free Too:
Description

The listing, Ancient Roman AE Coin - CONSTANTIUS II - Augustus - c.AD350 - The "Anti-Pagan" coin has ended.

This is a bronze coin issued by Constantius II, son of Constantine the Great, and Roman Emperor from AD 337 to 361. It is about 16mm across.

The obverse has a right-facing bust of the emperor w/ diadem and the legend is D N CONSTANTIVS P F AVG ("Our Lord, Constantius, Pious, Happy, and Revered").

The reverse shows two soldiers holdiung one military standard between them. The legend is GLORIA EXERCITVS ("Glory of the Army").

Please judge the grade of the coin for yourself by the pictures. The devices remain clear, with decent detail. The legends are about 90% readable.
Questions & Comments
Picture?type=square&access token=105469222550%7cd qfyki0ggnddypmnoq3ykmtsyq
Very nice listing, I'm sorry that some people are Jerks and have ruined the experience for you. Some people don't get that it's not always about making money but sharing things with others
Jun 12th, 2011 at 8:13:31 PM PDT by
Original
I'm over it now, lol. And thank you for kind words.
Jun 12th, 2011 at 8:18:48 PM PDT by
Original
wow if I could hold this coin, just think what it has seen!
Jun 14th, 2011 at 1:01:13 PM PDT by
Original
You really should have your own website where we all could read your teachings.
You are just amazing.
Jun 14th, 2011 at 11:24:05 AM PDT by
Original
First car to make to to the stop light....oh, wait. You're in the dessert. Nice open roads. Vroooom!!!! Speed is good:)
Jun 14th, 2011 at 8:02:47 AM PDT by
Original
Willie??? Nice license plate...i Like the red vehicle it is on. I thought perhaps it was a photoshopped deal. But it looks like the real deal:).
Jun 13th, 2011 at 11:03:11 PM PDT by
Original
It's attached to an antique 2007 Porsche Cayman.
Jun 13th, 2011 at 11:12:38 PM PDT by
Original
Great auction! Thanks for listing it!
Jun 13th, 2011 at 8:17:48 PM PDT by
Original
Thank you. Thanks for liking it.
Jun 13th, 2011 at 8:58:57 PM PDT by
Picture?type=square&access token=105469222550%7cd qfyki0ggnddypmnoq3ykmtsyq
i just have to say I love your auctions, you always amaze me, i love your postings and very well with your information i think you should repost them. I wish i had the points to buy them but i don't maybe next time, but don't listen to the ignorance of others it just makes you feel down, cheer up because we all love your postings,!!!!!!:)
Jun 13th, 2011 at 7:21:41 PM PDT by
Original
Stop, youre embarrassing me, lol.
Thank you for your empathy.
Jun 13th, 2011 at 9:00:49 PM PDT by
Picture?type=square&access token=105469222550%7cd qfyki0ggnddypmnoq3ykmtsyq
your stuff is always so awesome, im extremely interested in everything you have, i just dont have the credits right now to bid. To hell with these people, I hope you continue to post your ancient givaways, its all so interesting!
Jun 13th, 2011 at 4:31:31 PM PDT by
Original
I should come back from holiday with a better quality of sorts in the artifact realm and a couple hundred dollars in older modern Israeli currency...and some Ottoman artifacts, but those can go for 1 credit as much as I care about those, lol.
Thank you for your support,

Willie
Jun 13th, 2011 at 6:30:21 PM PDT by
Picture?type=square&access token=105469222550%7cd qfyki0ggnddypmnoq3ykmtsyq
I think we have all had our own rounds with such folks. I do hope you choose to continue listing these awesome finds. I especially loved reading all the info you had on this coin and I will be reading the others as well.
Jun 12th, 2011 at 8:34:46 PM PDT by
Original
Thank you. I shouldnt have taken it so personally, but i was having a bad day.
My C.O used to tell me that when someone of rank loses their temper, it causes those around them to lose face...and I agree.
Maybe if I was forced to hold two five gallon buckets of sand at shoulder height for three hours, I would feel better, lol.
Jun 12th, 2011 at 8:48:30 PM PDT by
Original
Flavius Julius Constantius, second son of Constantine I and Fausta, was born on 7 August 317 in Illyricum. He seems to have been made a Caesar on 13 November 324 in Nicomedeia. He was sent to Gaul when his brother Constantine II fought on the Danube in 332. At the time of his father's Tricennalia he went to Constantinople and married his first wife, the daughter of his uncle Julius Constantius. When his father died in May 337, Constantius, who was campaigning in the east, rushed back to Constantinople and arranged for his father's obsequies. He may have been the force behind the murder of a large number of relatives and retainers in a purge. The only male family members who survived were Julian and his half-brother Gallus. The purge may have had its roots in the religious squabbling between the Orthodox and Arian factions in Constantinople.In the first part of September 337 Constantius II and his two brothers met in Pannonia where they were acclaimed Augusti by the army to divide up the empire among themselves. The realm of Constantius II included the east, except for Thrace, Achaea, and Macedon. After his brother Constans I was killed by the forces of Magnentius in 350, Constantius obtained possession of his brother's realm which included the territory of Constantine II, who had died in 340.
Jun 6th, 2011 at 1:04:02 PM PDT by
Original
This is really an awesome auction! I'm sorry that you had a bad experience in the community! Don't let people like that faze you!~*Blessings*~!
Jun 12th, 2011 at 11:01:36 AM PDT by
Original
Thank you. I have a great fin listing that would look great on you.
Jun 12th, 2011 at 2:04:05 PM PDT by
Original
Does this really mean that you don't want anybody to bid on this one?
There are some of us that are really interested!!! I for one would bid and hope to win and have a print out with details about it. Please let me know.
Jun 11th, 2011 at 3:17:29 PM PDT by
Original
I already had the Widow's Mite's removed. If someone is actually interested in history, and not how much greedy money they can sell it for, I may put them back up next week.
The auctions that I have listed now will be shipped, but I will not include a $65.00 certificate of authenticity on a $60.00 coin that costs me more to ship than the ammount of credits I'm getting for them (in response to greedy bidders, not you personally.
Thank you.
Jun 11th, 2011 at 3:28:48 PM PDT by
Original
esosa:
Jun 6th, 2011 at 1:07:50 PM PDT by
Original
Since 801Lei_D was expecting a coin the size of a football, I will no longer list these coins. People like that can bid on Chinese garbage like the bluetooth dongles that cost 97 cents and bid 3000 credits.
Don't bid on this coin; you're credits will be refunded and I will keep it.
Thank you.
Jun 10th, 2011 at 5:03:30 PM PDT by
Original
Our chief source for Constantius' reign is the great historian Ammianus Marcellinus. He presents a mixed view of that emperor. In some ways a sound administrator and competent general, Constantius is also portrayed as easily influenced by those around him such as his wives, courtiers and the eunuchs of the court also attacks Constantius' great interest in Church affairs--alleging that he bankrupted the courier service with calls for Church councils. Of course, imperial interest in Church affairs was a major policy of his father Constantine and it may be that Constantius was trying to emulate his model (if only with mixed success). Indeed, Constantius II (like his brothers Constantine II and Constans) was raised a Christian. Among his many laws is the famous CTh 16.10.2 of 341 which either prohibited or re-issued his father's prohibition of pagan sacrifices. Sympathetic to Arianism, he spent a great deal of his reign calling Church councils. One of the longest-reigned emperors in Roman history, Constantius is hard for the modern historian to fully understand both due to his own actions and due to the interests of the authors of primary sources for his reign.
Jun 6th, 2011 at 1:07:20 PM PDT by
Original
This and the other ROMAN coin is still available, but I will be deleting my other auctions due to some dumb Listians who expect a 2200 year old coin to be half-dollar sized.
This coin is less than the size of a dime. it's sad that I have to explain coin size on EVERY auction, so I will be listing Chinese periferals from now on, and my $100 coins will stay with me.
Thank you 808Lei_D and Michele1 for making Listia a horrible place for me.
Jun 10th, 2011 at 5:16:59 PM PDT by
Original
His first wife, the daughter of Julius Constantius, must have died in the '40s or early '50s because he married his second wifeEusebia in 353. Although the marriage was harmonious, she passed away in 360. Largely due to the influence of Eusebia, Constantius appointed Gallus' half-brother Julian as his Caesar and dispatched him to Gaul in 355, while he went east to face the Persians. When Julian's military successes between 355 and 360 became too much for Constantius to endure, he attempted to weaken the Caesar by asking that some of the Gallic troops be sent to him for service in the east. Julian's troops acclaimed the Caesar as Augustus during January or February of 360; while en route to put down Julian, Constantius passed away at Mopsucrenae in Cilicia on 3 November 361. To give Constantius some credit, he is reported to have named Julian as his successor to avoid a succession crisis. At some point in 361 before his death he had married Faustina, who bore him a daughter, Constantia, posthumously.
Jun 6th, 2011 at 1:05:39 PM PDT by
Original
The Persians were not the only threat to the empire during his reign. Constantius also fought several campaigns against various barbarian groups. However, his greatest threat came from a series of usurpers who arose in various sections of the western portions of the empire. To cope with them, Constantius shifted his base of operations from the east to Mediolanum (Milan) during the 350s. Although the revolts of his kinsman Nepotian in 350 and that of Silvanus in 355 were repressed by his opponents or by the emperor himself, the usurpation of Magnentius and that of Vetranio formed the basis of a more serious threat to the foundation of Constantius' rule. Both usurpers raised their standards in revolt in 350. Although Vetranio was repressed by Constantius into honorable retirement in the same year, it was only after the costly Battle of Mursa in 351 and the victory at Mons Seleuci in 353 that Constantius was able to quell Magnentius, who committed suicide in August 353. In order to keep the Persians in check while he was dealing with the various usurpers, Constantius had appointed his cousin Gallus Caesar in 351 and had sent him east to maintain a Roman presence there. Gallus, however, under the influence of his wife Constantina, soon challenged his cousin's authority and was put to death by Constantius at the end of 354.
Jun 6th, 2011 at 1:05:09 PM PDT by
Original
Constantius spent a great deal of his reign on military campaigns; between 337 and 350, he resided in Antioch, between 351-359 he spent much of his time in Sirmium and Mediolanum (Milan), and in 360-361 he lived in Antioch again. While in the east, he spent several of his summers campaigning against the Persians. Although he appears to have been a competent general, some contemporaries felt that Constantius was a better soldier in civil wars than in foreign combat and some disparaged his apparent reluctance to face the Persians. However, this judgement may be a bit unfair. Perhaps "mixed success" might be a safer description of Constantius' military career. He succeeded in stopping every major Persian invasion, as the Battle of Singara in 348, costly to both sides, demonstrates. Indeed, when viewed in contrast with those of his immediate successors, Constantius' struggles with the Persians appear in a more favorable light.
Jun 6th, 2011 at 1:04:39 PM PDT by

Ancient Roman AE Coin - CONSTANTIUS II - Augustus - c.AD350 - The "Anti-Pagan" coin is in the Antiques category