Lucius Verus, 161-169. Aureus (Gold, 19 mm, 7.41 g, 6 h), Rome, 164. •L•VERVS AVG ARMENIACVS Bare head of Lucius Verus to right.
Rev. TR P IIII IMP II COS II - REX ARMEN / DAT Lucius Verus seated to left on curule chair set on square platform; behind him to left and right, two officers; below to left, the Armenian King Sohaemus standing left, raising his right hand to his head to adjust his diadem or tiara and holding an uncertain object in his left. BMC 300. Calicó 2154 (
same dies). Cohen 158. RIC 512. A beautiful example of this historically interesting issue. Minor weakness on Verus' hair
, otherwise, about extremely fine.
Ex Naumann E-Auction 74, 3 February 2019, 369, Roma 7, 22 March 2014, 1075 and Numismatica Ars Classica R, 17 May 2007, 1553.
Gaius Julius Sohaemus was a nobleman from Emesa who claimed an illustrious lineage back to the Median Princess Iotapa, the betrothed of Alexander Helios, who was the eldest son of Mark Antony and Cleopatra VII. However, Sohaemus was also a Roman senator, and at some point, even a consul, although the exact dates and succession of the events of his career are somewhat in dispute. Antoninus Pius probably appointed Sohaemus to King of Armenia in 144, but he was expelled in 161 from his throne by an offensive by the Parthian King Vologaeses IV (circa 147-191), who hoped to take advantage of the regime change in Rome following the death of Antoninus. However, it soon became obvious that Rome would not let this aggression go unpunished. After an initial defeat of the Roman governor of Cappadocia, Marcus Sedatius Severianus, Marcus Aurelius ordered his co-ruler Lucius Verus to lead a counter-offensive against the Parthians. The junior Augustus set up his command center in Antiochia, from where his general Marcus Statius Priscus invaded Armenia in 163 and restored Sohaemus to the Armenian throne, an event which was celebrated by the emission of this wonderful aureus.
The Roman advance did not stop there, as the brilliant general, Avidius Cassius, moved into Mesopotamia in 165, where he captured the Parthian capital, Ktesiphon, before even pushing into Media in 166. When the Romans eventually withdrew, they brought with them what would later be called the Antonine Plague, a dreadful disease that would greatly harm the empire over the next fifteen years. The fate of Sohaemus, on the other hand, is again somewhat in dispute, as there are reports of him being expelled from Armenia once again, perhaps in the course of the Roman retreat of 166. However, the next King of Armenia, whose name we know was Vologaeses II, assumed the throne in 186. This large gap has led to speculations that Sohaemus, though undoubtedly quite old by now, may still have been in power up to this point.