A rare half follis from the Revolt of the Heraclii
Lot 1493
Revolt of the Heraclii, 608-610. Half Follis (Bronze, 24 mm, 5.87 g, 1 h), Alexandria, 609-610. δmn ЄRACLIO CONSULII Busts of Heraclius the Younger and of his father the Exarch Heraclius, both bare-headed, bearded and wearing consular robes; between their heads, a cross. Rev. Large K flanked by A/N/N/O and XIII; above, cross; below, A. DOC 15. MIB 17. SB 724. Rare. Some marks, otherwise, about very fine.

From a European collection, formed before 2005.

Heraclius the Elder was a successful Byzantine general of Armenian descent who made a career in the later years of the Roman-Persian War of 572-591. In 595, the emperor Maurice Tiberius appointed Heraclius to magister militum per Armeniam and ordered him to crush the revolt of Samuel Vahewuni and Atat Khorkhoruni, the details of which are reported by the 7th century Armenian bishop and historian Sebeos, who thus sheds a brief light on the general's earlier career due to its connections to Armenian history. We only hear of Heraclius again in 608, when he was serving as the Exarch of Africa and, together with his son and future emperor Heraclius the Younger, decided to put the might of the Exarchate in the balance in an attempt to remove the emperor Phocas from power. We are being told that the main motive behind the Revolt of the Heraclii was their loyalty to the previous emperor Maurice Tiberius, who had been overthrown and killed by Phocas in 602, but the disastrous failures of the usurper's reign and the personal ambitions of the Heraclii no doubt played a great role in the decision-making. In a very unusual step, the Heraclii initially abstained from declaring themselves emperors but assumed a joint consulship instead. The obverse of this coin shows us the two Heraclii uncrowned and in consular robes, presenting them as Roman traditionalists defending a just cause against the illegitimate usurper Phocas. It was only when Heraclius the Younger, sailing from Carthage, captured Constantinople in the fall of 610 that he was crowned emperor, the news of which reached his father in Carthage later that year, just shortly before he died.
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Closing time: 31-May-20, 17:57:00 CEST
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