As Domitian - Victory against the Chatti
DOMITIAN. AE As. Rome, 85 AD.
Obv. IMP CAES DOMIT AVG GERM COS XI CENS POT PP Laureated head right
Rev. Mars advancing to l. with parazonium, holding victory and trophy between S - C.
Cohen 426 (3 F)
Type belonging to the serie struck to commemorate the victory in the campaign against the Chatti, a German tribe, started in 83 AD.
Domitian harboured an inferiority complex toward his brother and father. In the matter of military glory, the jealousy was acute: his brother had led the siege of Jerusalem, and his father had led most of the war in Judaea, and had won much glory in his earlier years, including a triumphia ornamentalia for his command in Claudius’ invasion of Britain. Domitian had always been eager for a military command, and Suetonius (Domitian 1) tells us that when his father established his government in Rome, Domitian greatly wanted glory so badly that he "…planned a quite unnecessary expedition into Gaul and Germany, from which his father’s friends managed to dissuade him". In actuality, his skills in the arts of war were enviable: he is said to have been able to shoot an arrow between the spread fingers of a hand without fail. His first campaign – which this well-composed issue celebrates – was against the Chatti in 83. Domitian led a perfectly successful campaign in which the Chatti were roundly defeated and the Roman border was extended beyond the Rhine. In honour of this victory Domitian was hailed Germanicus, won a triumph, and even had an arch erected. [NAC]
Bagnolet coin fair, ex. Chastagner, 3 Dec. 2005
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