Caligula AD 37-41 Silver Plated Denarius (Contemporary Forgery)
£975.00
Caligula AD 37-41 Silver Plated Denarius.
Busts of Caligula & Tiberius.
The Twelve Caesars
Contemporary forgery. An interesting piece given that Caligula and Tiberius do not appear on the same coin of official issue, proving that this must be an imitation but of remarkably fine style. Silver plating wearing off on high points.
18mm, 3.27g
This coin will come with find area provenance.
Caligula AD 37-41
Gaius Julius Caesar Germanicus was the great grandson of both Augustus and Mark Antony. The youngest son of Germanicus and Agrippina Senior he acquired the name Caligula from the tiny military boots or caligae that he wore as a young child during his father’s campaigns in Germany.
Caligula’s youth saved him from purges which claimed his mother and elder brothers. In AD 32 he moved in with his great uncle the Emperor Tiberius. When Tiberius died childless he was proclaimed emperor in AD 37. Initially he showed promise however after an illness and under the influence of his grandmother Antonia he became increasingly deranged. The excesses and debaucheries of his reign are well documented. Famously he made his horse a consul.
Eventually a plot was formed by the praetorian guard who had him murdered in AD 41.
In contrast to Caligula the coinage minted during his reign was conservative in character with many types honouring his relatives both living and deceased.
1 in stock