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Lot 58. Caracalla Denarius, Geta in equestrian exercise reverse, very rare
Time left: |
Bidding closed
(Sunday, February 17th, 19:29:00 CET)
Current time: Monday, November 25th, 00:26:29 CET
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Price realised: |
CHF 205.00 (9 bids)
Approx. EUR 220.21 / USD 229.41 / GBP 183.08
Bid history
Amount
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Bidder
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Date
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CHF 205.00
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Bidder 1 *
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2013-02-03, 12:55:03
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CHF 205.00
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Bidder 2 *
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2013-02-17, 19:28:49
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CHF 184.00
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Bidder 2 *
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2013-02-17, 19:27:50
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CHF 170.00
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Bidder 2 *
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2013-02-17, 19:27:40
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CHF 160.00
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Bidder 2 *
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2013-02-17, 19:27:35
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CHF 150.00
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Bidder 2 *
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2013-02-12, 21:34:02
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CHF 140.00
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Bidder 2 *
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2013-02-12, 21:33:48
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CHF 130.00
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Bidder 2 *
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2013-02-12, 21:32:49
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CHF 110.00
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Bidder 1 *
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2013-02-03, 10:13:56
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* User names of other bidders are replaced by Bidder 1, 2, and so on.
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High bidder: |
Bidder 1
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eAuction #13, Lot 58. Estimate: CHF 100.00
Caracalla (198-217 AD). AR Denarius (16-18 mm, 1.65 g), Roma (Rome) 206/207 AD. Obv. ANTONINVS PIVS AVG, Laureate head right. Rev. PRINC IVVENT COS, Geta on horseback as Prince of the Youth, leading two other horsemen in an equestrian exercise or ceremony. RIC IV - (mule combining an obverse of Caracalla with a rare reverse of Geta).
Very rare. Apparently the second specimen known. Fine.
Curtis Clay: "Cohen misdescribes the horsemen in this type as being Septimius, Caracalla, and Geta. Actually it is Geta leading two other horsemen in an equestrian display, as Eckhlel already correctly stated... Geta was consul for the first time with Caracalla in 205, and the point of this type is that even the youngest member of the imperial family, Geta, who was still only Caesar and Prince of the Youth, had now become consul, PRINC IVVENT COS. A rare denarius of Caracalla commemorates the same event with a type of Caracalla and Geta seated on curule chairs on a platform, Septimius standing behind and between them, legend IMP ET CAESAR AVG FILI COS, "The Emperor and the Caesar, sons of the Augustus, as consuls," BMCRE, pl. 34.1. One might be inclined to assign the PRINC IVVENT COS type to the year of the consulship, 205 itself, but actually it appears to have been struck mainly in 206, and perhaps even early in 207. The muled denarius of Caracalla with the type shows his head only on the obverse, so cannot have been struck before that bust type superseded the earlier draped bust in the course of 206. I have not yet found a denarius of Geta himself struck from the same reverse die as the Caracalla mule."
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