116 AD., Trajan, Rome mint struck for circulation in the East, As, RIC 648.
Trajan, Rome mint struck for circulation in the East of the Roman Empire, 116 AD.,
As (ø 24 mm / 8,02 g), brass ("orichalcum"), axes coin alignment ↑↓ (ca. 180°),
Obv.: IMP CAES NER TRAIANO OPTIMO AVG GERM , his radiate, bust facing right, drapery on far shoulder.
Rev.: DAC PARTHICO P M TR POT XX COS VI PP / S C , around and in wreath.
RIC II, p. 290, no. 648 (common) ; BMC 1092 ; Coh. 122 ; W. E. Metcalf, A Note on Trajan's Latin Aes from Antioch, MN 22 (1977), p. 67, 1 and plate 8, 3 ; I. Carradice - M. Cowell, NC 147, 1987, 26 ff. .
(uncleaned)
This unusual issue struck at the end of 115 is typically attributed to an eastern mint, usually Antioch. The issue consisted of the as and semis, both with radiate busts, and both struck on orichalcum flans. Metallurgical tests have shown that the orichalcum used is indistinguishable from the orichalcum used for Roman sestertii and dupondii and quite different from the orichalcum used for some provincial issues. This fact, along with the style of the portraiture and legend, and the die axis of 6:00 versus the normal 12:00 die axis for the Antioch mint, suggests that this issue was minted at Rome and shipped to Syria. See the two articles by Metcalf in ANSMN 20 (1975) and 22 (1977), and Carradice and Cowell's article in Num. Chron. (1987).