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Caesar denarius
Caesar denarius













In 42 BCE, Brutus committed suicide after his army lost a crucial battle at Philippi in north-east Greece.

#Caesar denarius series#

Ironically, the murder of Julius Caesar set into motion a series of power struggles and civil wars that would finally put an end to Republicanism in Rome for ever and see the establishment of imperial rule. Plaetorius Cestanius, Brutus’ financial officer, and describes Brutus himself as Imperator, the word which would eventually denote Emperors of Rome. Yet here is Brutus, advertising himself as the liberator of Rome while appearing in profile on his own coin. When he issued coins bearing his own image it was, for many, a step too far towards monarchy. Early in 44 BCE Julius Caesar had been appointed ‘Perpetual Dictator’, in an attempt to bring political stability to Rome, and the king-like powers that he had accrued provided the principal motivation behind his assassination. Under the Republic, it was taboo for any living individual to have himself portrayed on a coin, for to do so smacked of autocracy. Brutus himself claimed descent from the leader of this insurrection. It is the son of this Tarquin who we see assaulting the virtuous Roman lady Lucretia in Titian’s magnificent painting in the Fitzwilliam, a crime that led to a popular uprising against the Roman monarchy. Rome had been a Republic, governed by a Senate, since 509 BCE, when the unpopular king, Tarquin the Proud, was expelled. It is all the more remarkable, then, that the self-proclaimed liberator had himself portrayed so unashamedly on the other side of the coin. Freedom, Brutus’ coin insists, is secured with the dagger. One is reminded of a gold crown, left, issued by Oliver Cromwell, the great English Republican, in 1658, which bears the legend Pax Quaeritur Bello – 'Peace is sought through War'. This side of the coin, then, stands both as a celebration of freedom and as a warning to others who would upset the established Republican government. This abbreviates Idus Martiae – the Ides (15th) of March – the date on which the murder took place. And if this were not enough to remind the Roman citizen of the recent bloodshed, then the legend EID MAR is stamped beneath the emblems. It is flanked by two daggers, the weapons used to kill Caesar. The reverse side shows a pileus, the cap worn by recently freed slaves that had become a more general symbol of liberty. Brutus left Italy a few months after the murder, and this coin was minted while he was campaigning in the East. Marcus Junius Brutus, whose face appears on the obverse side, was one of several conspirators who stabbed this powerful general and statesman to death during a meeting of the Roman Senate.

caesar denarius

This coin, so remarkable even in antiquity that it was mentioned by the Roman historian Dio Cassius (150–235 CE), commemorates the assassination of Gaius Julius Caesar in 44 BCE. 'Brutus stamped, upon the coins which were being minted, his own likeness and a cap and two daggers indicating by this and by the inscription that he and Cassius had liberated the fatherland.'













Caesar denarius