Category: Blog

  • Tiberius Asinius Philopappos as Grammateus, Colossae, 138–161 CE

    Tiberius Asinius Philopappos as Grammateus, Colossae, 138–161 CE

    This post has brief notes for an unpublished coin that was identified by CCCRH Research Associate, Sebastian Harris. Sebastian arranged for this coin to be added to the RPC listing and has also prepared the following notes.


    As this next unpublished coin was minted in Colossae and we have already talked about Colossae’s history and religious significance, I wanted to focus on the interesting work of the grammateus (secretary), Tiberius Asinius Philopappos, a prolific “coin sponsor” during the reign of Antoninus Pius (138-161 CE). 

    The Asinia gens (family) were a plebian family from Teate, the chief town of the Marrucini, an Oscan tribe that rose to prominence due to their ancestor’s involvement as a general in the Social Wars of the early first century BCE. The Asinii gained Roman citizenship because of their involvement, the most famous of whom was the historian Gaius Asinius Pollio (75 BCE-4 CE), whose lost history provided “much of the material for the historians Appian and Plutarch.” The Asinii appear to have also held prominent and “notable” roles in Lydia and Phrygia, where Colossae is located, with twelve named individuals holding esteemed position from the Late Republic to the Third Century CE: 

    IndividualPositionTime PeriodEmperor
    Gnaeus AsiniusProconsul of Asia34/33 BCEN/A
    Gaius Asinius Gallus SaloninusProconsul of Asia6/5 BCEAugustus
    Gaius Asinius PollioProconsul of Asia38/9 CECaligula
    Tiberius Asinius EpaphroditusNotable in Colossae1st Cent. CEUnknown
    Gaius Asinius FrugiMoneyer of Alia98-116 CETrajan
    Gaius Asinius RufusNotable in Lydia134-135 CEHadrian
    Tiberius Asinius PhilopapposGrammateus of Colossae138-161 CEAntoninus Pius
    Gaius Asinius Agreus PhilopapposArchiereus of Asia147-160 CEAntoninus Pius
    Gaius Asinius FrugiArchiereus of Asia176 CEMarcus Aurelius
    Asinius AmiantusProconsul of Asiac. 220s CESeverus Alexander
    Gaius Asinius Nicomachus IulianusProconsul of Asia225-230 CESeverus Alexander
    Marcus Asinius SabinianusProconsul of Asia239/40 CEGordian III

    *Note: proconsul (‘governor of a Roman province’), archiereus (‘chief priest’) and notable (‘prominent citizen’)

    In Colossae specifically, there are two named members of the Asinii: Tiberius Asinius Epaphroditus and Tiberius Asinius Philoppapos. The earlier Epaphroditus is known from a first-century inscription, in which he built a memorial monument to the prominent Roman citizen Marcus Larcius Crispinus. The more relevant figure is Philopappos, who was “perhaps a son or grandson… certainly a relative” of Epaphroditus and grammateus of Colossae. Cadwallader explains it is more likely that “his parents held high hopes for his love of his granddad, or they might just have held a general aspiration of reverence for ancestors,” hence the adoption of the cognomen/family name Philopappos (‘one who loves his grandfather’). Honour was a significant component of Greco-Roman culture, hence the adoption of hundreds of these names, including the personal name ‘Philopappos’ seventeen times. From his name, we also know he rarely referred to his whole name twice (RPC IV.2 1874 and RPC IV.2 25273), and instead opted for his family name which could be interpreted as a statement of kinship to the citizens. With that considered, it is now time to analyse this unique Colossian coin. 

    This coin depicts a bareheaded, draped and cuirassed bust of Marcus Aurelius with the legend M AVPHΛIOC BHPOC KAICAP (Marcus Aurelius Verus Caesar) on the obverse. On the reverse, it illustrates the Greek version of the Capitoline Triad (Hera/Juno, Zeus/Jupiter, and Athena/Minerva) standing, with the magistrates’ name and Greek legend KOΛOCCHNOIC (to the Colossians). The Capitoline Triad were three prominent Roman deities worshipped atop the Capitoline Hill, but it is likely the worship of these three figures was borrowed from the earlier Etruscans and adopted by the Romans. The coin also suggests that Philoppapos gave the coin to the people and was either paying homage to what was present in Rome on the Capitoline Hill or paying for a statue to be incorporated in the imperial sanctuary there. Similar and unique coins with the same reverse have also been found at Trapezopolis during the reigns of Hadrian (RPC III 2261B) and Antoninus Pius (RPC IV.2 11702).

    This coins are now available in the CCCRH Database and in Roman Provincial Coinage Online as RPC IV.2, 25273/1


    References

    Angelos, C. 2013. ‘Second Thoughts on Second Names in Aphrodisias,’ in R. Parker, ed. Personal Names in Ancient Anatolia, Proceedings of the British Academy, British Academy Scholarship, 207-230.

    Cadwallader, A.H. n.d. Colossae. Bible Odyssey. https://tinyurl.com/mry9adsm

    Cadwallader, A.H. 2023. Colossae, Colossians, Philemon: The Interface, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.

    Drew-Bear, T. 1980. ‘Problèmes de la géographie historique en Phrygie: L’example d’Alia,’ ANRW II.7(2): 932-952.

    Kearsley, R.A. 1986. ‘Asiarchs, archiereis, and the archiereiai of Asia,’ Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 27: 183-192.

    Lewis, P.E. July 2013. ‘Colossae: The Buried City,’ The Australasian Coin & Banknote Magazine, Accessed 27th July 2024, https://tinyurl.com/yensemxu

    Oxford University. n.d. Φιλόπαππος. Lexicon of Greek Personal Names, https://tinyurl.com/2wvxmrbt

    Ryberg, I.S. 1931. ‘Was the Capitoline Triad Etruscan or Italic?’ The American Journal of Philology 52(2): 145-156.

    Strachan, C.C. 2014. Asinius. Roman Nobilitas Prosopography, https://tinyurl.com/yc4np7a9

  • Search the CCCRH collection

    Search our Collection

    The full CCCRH inventory can be browsed or you can search for a specific item. This link provides you with read-only access to selected fields from every record in the database.

    When using this link for the first time you will be asked to register your email address and name. For each person who registers in this way, the Foundation receives a $10 credit towards the cost of our subscription to the AirTable software that powers our site.

    By default the items grouped by type (Ampulla, Amulets, Badges, etc) and then sorted by the name of the record.

    Please note that this collection is a work-in-progress and many records do not yet have photographs or cimplete academic descriptions. However, the curated subsets usually have photographs for most of the items as well as extensive notes.

  • Silver tetradrachm of Tiberius

    The Centre for Coins, Culture and Religious History has recently acquired a rare silver tetradrachm issued during the reign of the Roman emperor Tiberius (reigned 14–37 CE). There are only 4 known specimens of this coin and this is the finest of them. 

    The head of Tiberius is on the obverse. On the reverse, Zeus is seated on a throne holding Nike on his hand. There is no indication on the coin when or where it was minted, but it was most likely somewhere in northern Syria or Cilicia. In The Syro-Phoenician Tetradrachms and their Fractions, published in 2000, Michel and Karin Prieur considered that it was minted in Antioch. 

    The CCCRH specimen is unusual in that nearly all the Greek letters are visible, and the two monograms on the reverse are clearly shown. On the examples in Prieur (#31), McAlee (#213) and Roman Provincial Coinage (#4110), the monograms were incorrectly identified as M and H. Apart from being very clear in our example, the wording of the Greek inscription on this coin is particularly significant. 

    The obverse legend reads ΤΙΒΕΡΙΟΥ ΚΑΙΣΑΡΟΣ ΘΕΟΥ ΣΕΒΑΣΤΟΥ, while on the reverse we find: ΥΙΟΥ ΣΕΒΑΣΤΟΝ. This translates into English as “of Tiberius Caesar, divine Augustus / son of Augusti.” Presumably, the Augusti were Octavian and Livia, but the legend clearly states that Tiberius was divine. 

    While the imperial cult had developed rapidly in the eastern provinces of the early Roman Empire, such claims to divine status would have been objectionable to the Jewish diaspora communities in Antioch, Tarsus or other major cities in the area. Indeed, the Maccabean Revolt (c. 165 BCE) was triggered at least in part by the harsh enforcement of similar claims by the Seleucid king, Antiochus IV Epiphanes. 

    It is unknown whether Jewish objections to this coin of Tiberius influenced Roman policy, but, significantly, the word ΘΕΟΥ (god) is absent from similar coins issued by his immediate successors: Caligula (37–41 CE) and Claudius (41–54 CE). Due to its date during the life of Jesus (who was crucified in 30 CE), its provenance (Antioch) and its explicit attribution of divinity to Tiberius, this coin illustrates the political theology of the Roman Empire promoted on coins such as the so-called “Tribute Penny” shown to Jesus in Mark 12:15 and parallels.  

  • Final CAB articles now available

    The Australasian Coin and Banknote Magazine ceased publication in November 2022. The masthead has since been acquired by Imperial Group and will be relaunched in March 2023 as The Australian Coin Review (ACR).

    The two final articles contributed to CAB by Dr Peter Lewis are now available on the CCCRH website:

    November 2022 – Some thoughts on Becker’s Holey Dollar reproductions
    October 2022 – Giovanni Boccaccio

  • Royal Portraits

    IMAGE: https://www.royalmint.com/our-coins/ranges/historic-coins/queen-elizabeth-ii/

    As part of the Jubilee celebration for Elizabeth II, The Age newspaper has published a beautifully illustrated story of portraits of the Queen on coins and banknotes over the past 70+ years. The story begins with her first appearance upon a Canadian banknote in 1935.

    Read the full story here …

  • Render unto Caesar

    A brief 5m 30s trailer has been released to promote the publication on 29 March of a new book by John Dominic Crossan, Render unto Caesar (HarperOne, 2022).

    Watch the trailer

    Read a review

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