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Coin Detail
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ID:     51-384
     [UNVERIFIED]
Type:     Roman Imperial
Issuer:     Hostilian
Date Ruled:     A.D. 251
Metal:     Gold
Denomination:     Aureus
Struck / Cast:     struck
Date Struck:     AD circa 251
Weight:     4.18 g
Obverse Legend:     C VALENS HOSTIL MES QVINTVS NC
Obverse Description:     Bare headed and draped bust right
Reverse Legend:     PRINCIPI IVV_ENTVTIS
Reverse Description:     Hostilian, in military attire, standing left, holding standard in right hand and sceptre in left
Mint:     Rome
Primary Reference:     RIC 181 var. (spear instead of sceptre)
Reference2:     C 33
Reference3:     Calicó 3316a (these dies)
Photograph Credit:     Numismatic Ars Classica NAC AG
Source:     http://www.arsclassicacoins.com/
Price Sold For:     80000 Swiss Franc
Date Sold:     3/5/09
Notes:     NAC Auction 51, Lot 384 Very rare and in an exceptional state of preservation. A delicate portrait perfectly struck in high relief, almost Fdc Life for Hostilian, the younger of two sons of Trajan Decius and Herennia Etruscilla, was brief and tragic. His is one of the most difficult reigns for historians to reconstruct due to the poor evidence of the period and the great many changes that occurred in the political scenario. As the youngest son of Trajan Decius, perhaps only just beginning his ‘teen’ years, Hostilian remained in Rome with his mother when his father and older brother departed for the Danube, never to return. During the course of his father’s absence, Hostilian was hailed Caesar. This may have occurred as early as 250 when his brother Herennius Etruscus was still Caesar, or more likely it occurred when his brother was raised to the rank of Augustus after the initial defeat of the Goths in the spring of 251. In either case, when his father and brother died in battle in the summer of 251 Hostilian and his mother were still safely residing in Rome. The new emperor, Trebonianus Gallus, soon journeyed to Rome where he was confirmed by the senate and honoured Hostilian and his mother by sparing them of harm. The widowed empress seemingly retained her title of Augusta, and young Hostilian was actually raised from Caesar to Augustus, a title he shared with his new ‘adoptive father’ Gallus. This was no minor act, for Gallus’ son Volusian (who apparently was older than Hostilian) was given the junior rank of Caesar. As honourable as Gallus’ overture was, it mattered little, for within a few months Hostilian died of the plague that was then ravaging the capital.