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1 Aureus - Imitating Probus, 276-282

Issuer Uncertain Germanic tribes
Year 276-325
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Composition Gold plated bronze (subaeratus)
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Obverse description Barbarous imitation of an imperial Roman aureus, presenting a helmeted, draped, and cuirassed bust of Emperor Probus facing left, rendered in a crude provincial style characteristic of Germanic imitative coinage. The crested helmet features schematic decorative detail, and the cuirass is partially visible beneath the drapery. A debased Latin circular legend surrounds the effigy in the field, the letterforms exhibiting the degenerate script typical of late third- to early fourth-century barbarous issues. The overall execution betrays the hand of a non-Roman celator working from a prototype rather than official die-engraving traditions.
Obverse script Latin
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Reverse description The reverse depicts a barbarous rendering of a Roman imperial triumphal scene, showing the Emperor in profile facing left, driving a quadriga and extending his right hand holding a wreath, a motif drawn from official late Roman imperial coinage. The figures and horses are rendered schematically, with simplified anatomical detail consistent with Germanic imitative production of the period. A partially legible debased Latin legend encircles the central motif, the letterforms heavily corrupted from the original Roman prototype. The composition reflects a deliberate imitation of official Probus-era reverse types, likely inspired by circulating Roman aurei encountered through trade or tribute.
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