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July 17, 2026

Roman Republic. Gordian III AD 238-244 AR Antoninianus. 5.00 g, 23 mm. LAETITIA

Roman Imperial. Gordian III (AD 238-244) AR Antoninianus in collectible condition. Please see pictures. We combine shipping. Composition: Billon Weight: 5.00 gr Size: 23 mm Obv. : IMP GORGIANVS PIVS FEL AVG; radiate, draped and cuirassed bust right Rev. : LAETITIA AVG N; Laetitia standing left, holding wreath and anchor Superb strike and surface! Canadian customers must pay applicable taxes. Foreign buyers pay NO Tax but may have to pay applicable VAT and/or duties in their respective countries. Shipping and Handling. We have a prompt shipping policy, usually within 2 business days after receiving payment. Within Canada: Shipping is $12.00 with Tracking Number, up to 10 items including. To USA: To Continental USA shipping is $15.00 with Tracking Number, up to 10 items including. World Wide: Shipping is $25.00 with Tracking Number, up to 5 items including. Return Policy We offer 100% return guarantee, whether coins are professionally graded or raw. Just let us know what you are returning, will issue full refund once item(s) received in their original form and/or condition.
July 17, 2026

Drusu As AD 23 SPECTACULAR DETAIL

This magnificent As of Drusus issued as a restoration piece under the emperor Titus is so beautiful with finely styled dies. This piece has been tooled in the past as part of the cleaning process but its beauty has come alive due to this enhancement. A real gem of a coin which clearly shows the magnificence of the cutter of the die used to strike this coin exactly 2000 years ago. DRUSUS: The death of Drusus on September 14th AD 23 left Tiberius without a direct heir. It had considerable implications for the imperial family.Poisoned?Normally, we (as indeed would many of the ancient commentators) would be skeptical about any accusation of poisoning. People died suddenly in antiquity. People died young. Medical science was very basic. Mostly, there was no way of knowing why someone died (unless they were stabbed or strangled or beheaded, the last of which tends to be relatively clearly marked on the corpse). So, when a powerful individual died, there was often a temptation to look for a hidden hand behind the death.But merely because the evidence is shaky, it doesn’t mean poisoning was not employed. It seems very likely that the emperor Claudius was poisoned. And, in this instance, as well, the evidence points to poison. Tacitus, normally skeptical about such gossip, believes it to have been so.The story of the discovery of the poisoning is horrific and retold in Dio, 58.11 and Annales 5.9. Sejanus fell from power. He was killed, as was to be expected. But his young children were also murdered. The boy knew what was happening, but his sister was too young. Stories circulated that she raped before being strangled since in a perverse operation of legal and religious custom, it was not allowed to execute a virgin. When the news reached Apicata, their mother, she killed herself, and left a note in which she accused Sejanus and Livilla, sister of Germanicus and wife of Drusus, of having conspired to poison Drusus.Livilla and Sejanus were rumored to be lovers, and to have been lovers from before Drusus’ death. Secrets of imperial bedrooms can rarely be kept, but gossip and rumor must have followed the imperial family around. Truth is difficult to reach. There was a persistent theme under the early emperors of the formation of political relationship through sexual relationships, notable in the career of Messalina. Yet, what easier way was there of ruining the reputation of an imperial princess than making allegations about her sexual promiscuity?This was evidently more than a case of a bereaved and suicidal mother having one last act of revenge. Tiberius has the slaves in Drusus’ household tortured. Two of them, Eudemus and Lygdus, a eunuch, confessed to having poisoned Drusus with a slow-acting poison, so that it would like an extended illness (Annales 4.8; Annales 4.10-11). The story of the affair came out.Who benefits?In retrospect, the most obvious beneficiary was Sejanus. He had removed the emperor’s son, a man openly hostile to him. This meant that Tiberius had no adult male member of the family on whom to rely. But as the senators wept for the loss of Drusus (and perhaps also were remembering the recent loss of Germanicus), Tiberius ordered the sons of Germanicus to be brought into the senate house. These he commended to the senators, as he had commended them to the trust of their uncle, Drusus. It was evident that they were now expected to succeed Tiberius to the throne (Annales 4.8).This is one of the oddities of the episode. Drusus had children, Julia and Tiberius Gemellus. The latter was still young, having been born in late 19 (Annales 2.84), soon after the death of Germanicus. Julia was about 18 on the death of her father and probably already married to another Drusus, the son of Germanicus. It was the Germanican line, directly descended from Augustus, on which the imperial family rested its hopes.To have a chance of imperial power, Sejanus needed to insert himself into the imperial family. He had already betrothed his daughter to Claudius’ son. But he would need a brilliant marriage himself, to take him to the heart of the family. His most obvious predecessor, Agrippa, had married Julia, the emperor’s daughter. He also needed to remove the competition: the sons of Agrippina and GermanicusIn spite of all this very obvious familial and court politics, Tiberius finished his speech to the senate on Drusus’ death by hoping for a return to the Republic. Tacitus imagines the senators’ bewilderment (Annales 4.9).But without a family member to support him, Tiberius came to rely more on Sejanus. Sejanus was able to enhance his position and authority in Rome and achieve something close to dominance.
July 17, 2026

Roman Empire Gallienus Ad 253-268 Billon Antoninianus Coin (23mm, 3.8 grams)

The product is a Roman Empire Gallienus Ad 253-268 Billon Antoninianus Coin, measuring 23mm and weighing 3.8 grams. This ancient coin from the Roman Imperial era features the ruler Gallienus and is composed of billon. It is uncertified and ungraded, providing collectors and history enthusiasts with a piece of Roman numismatic history from the 3rd century AD.
July 17, 2026

DRUSUS, Died AD 23. AS Not in Wildwinds or RIC. Cohen 7. The coin is readable.

ROMAN EMPIREDRUSUS, son of Tiberius, he was poisoned by his wife Livilla. (Attention, guys!) AS, Bronze, 7.71 grams, 25.56 mm.Obverse: DRUSUS CAESAR TI AUG F DIVI AUG N.Reverse: IMP T CAES DIVI VESP F AUG PM, and internal legend: (TR PPP) COS VIII RESTITUT around large S(C)Reference: RIC -; Cohen 7 (# 09200-201)Very scarce We guarantee this coin genuine and as described. Shipping: Continental U.S: (Ebay shipping label with USPS tracking). . Canada and foreign countries $14.00 Ebay shipping label. Yes, we consolidate. Return policy: Returns accepted for any reason within 30 days of reception, if not damaged or altered, and with our original label. Thank you for visiting our site on Ebay.

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DRUSUS, Died AD 23. AS Not in Wildwinds or RIC. Cohen 7. The coin is readable.
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