Hadrian, 117-138. Semis (Orichalcum, 19 mm, 4.82 g, 6 h), Rome, for circulation in Cappadocia, circa 125-127. HADRIANVS AVGVSTVS Radiate head of Hadrian to right, with aegis on his left shoulder.
Rev. COS III Mount Argaios surmounted by statue of Sol-Helios, radiate, holding globe in his right hand and long scepter in his left. Cohen -, cf. 457 (laureate and without aegis). Ganschow -, cf. X29a (without aegis). RIC -, cf. 897 (without aegis). RPC III online 3159.5 corr. (
this coin, but aegis not noted). Sydenham -, cf. 290a (laureate and without aegis). Extremely rare. A lovely piece with an attractive green patina and a fine pedigree. Slightly smoothed
, otherwise, very fine.
From the collection of Eric ten Brink, ex Leu 3, 27 October 2018, 237, and that of Sir Arthur J. Evans (1851-1941), Ars Classica XVII, 3 October 1934, 1400.
While usually being attributed to Caesarea, the style of the very rare small bronzes of Hadrian with Latin legends showing Mount Argaios is clearly that of Rome. It is generally believed that the Rome mint shipped its dies to the East in such cases to have the coins struck on the spot, but the fact that RPC records an obverse die match between an Argaios-semis and a regular Rome mint piece in Vienna with a modius on the reverse (RPC III 3159.3 resp. BMC p. 442*) strongly indicates that all semisses were struck in Rome. The emergence of a local motive on a Roman Imperial coin is, in any case, very unusual.