Ancient Roman Emperor Diocletian 284-305AD Bronze Follis Rare Heavy Без бренда

Ancient Roman Emperor Diocletian 284-305AD Bronze Follis Rare Heavy Без бренда
Ancient Roman Emperor Diocletian 284-305AD Bronze Follis Rare Heavy Без бренда - фотография #2
Ancient Roman Emperor Diocletian 284-305AD Bronze Follis Rare Heavy Без бренда - фотография #3
Ancient Roman Emperor Diocletian 284-305AD Bronze Follis Rare Heavy Без бренда - фотография #4
Ancient Roman Emperor Diocletian 284-305AD Bronze Follis Rare Heavy Без бренда - фотография #5
Ancient Roman Emperor Diocletian 284-305AD Bronze Follis Rare Heavy Без бренда - фотография #6
Бренд: Без бренда
~ 1 441 ₽ 15.62 $

Характеристики

Roman Empire, Diocletian. 284 - 305 AD. AE-Follis.
Heraclea Mint.
Size: 27.10mm
Weight: 11.70g
Bust:   12) Laureate head right
Obverse:  26) IMP C C VAL DIOCLETIANVS PF AVG
Reverse:  48) GENIO POPVLI ROMANI
Mint: TS Thessalonica
Rx./ Genius standing lt. Fine.

Diocletian
Augustus 284-305
Originally Diokles, a Greek name, Diocletian gained the Latinized form of his name shortly before masterminding a revolt against Carinus. When Carinus received news of this insolence he set out at once with a large army to confront him. The two sides met in a prolonged and bloody match the results of which were finally turning against Diocletian. Seeing that all was lost he prepared to flee with what was left of his army when the most amazing thing happened. It seems Carinus had seduced the wife of one of his bodyguards who, for whatever possible reason, chose during the waning moments of the battle to avenge this affront by murdering his master.

Diocletian was then hailed as emperor by the same army that almost defeated him and he marched towards Rome as victor. Soon after his arrival he named his friend Maximian as co-emperor giving him rule over the western half of the empire. Both would then select subordinates who were not relatives of their own to help in the task and secure a line of succession unlike a blood dynasty. Diocletian's vision of this governmental scheme became known as the Tetrarchy and the first cycle of which was completed, as far as he was concerned, when he abdicated in 305 and demanded Maximian do likewise to leave their subordinates to rule.

Modern historians with the gift of hindsight pinpoint Diocletian's choice of reforming the army as the key culprit of the empire's downfall almost 200 years later. He figured that rather than have weak concentrations of army outposts scattered over the length of the empire's borders it would be better to have a centralized large force which could respond quickly in the event of a military crisis. While the theory may have been sound in principle he never foresaw the obstacles that led to the successful deployment and logistical problems that this method required and, thus, over time Romans became increasingly susceptible to barbarian attacks.

Diocletian died an old, forgotten and heartbroken man in his retirement palace in what is now Croatia. In the end he was vilified for shattering the economy, wreaking political chaos in Rome and resorting to the now somewhat anachronistic practice of persecuting Christians. Finally, he had to witness in his own lifetime the utter failure of his power sharing format when the Tetrarchy disintegrated into the Constantinian dynasty.

Sadly, with the rise of Diocletian we no longer get to see what the emperor looked like in real life. For half a century both the art and the workmanship of Roman coins had been in decline. But up until then there had been at least nominal effort expended in portraying the emperor’s actual facial features.

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