Barakat Gallery
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Home
  • Artworks
  • Exhibitions
  • About
  • Contact
Menu
  • Menu

Roman Coins - emperor hadrian

  • All
  • Byzantine Coins
  • greek coin forger's dies
  • Greek Coins
  • Jewish Coins
  • jewish war against rome
  • kushan coins
  • other coin forger's dies
  • parthian coins
  • persian coins
  • phoenician coins
  • roman coin forger's dies
  • roman procurators
  • sassanid coins
  • world coins
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor leo iii
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor anastasius
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor constans ii
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor heraclius
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor justin ii
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor justinian i
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor leo vi the wise
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor maurice tiberius
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor theophilus
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor tiberius ii constantine
  • Byzantine Coins - emperor zeno
  • Coin Jewelry Highlights
  • Greek Coins - alexander drachms
  • Greek Coins - alexander gold staters
  • Greek Coins - alexander tetradrachms
  • Greek Coins - athenian coins
  • Greek Coins - attalid coins
  • Greek Coins - bactrian gold coins
  • Greek Coins - bactrian silver coins
  • Greek Coins - celtic imatatives
  • Greek Coins - corinthian coins
  • Greek Coins - electrum coins
  • Greek Coins - greek city states
  • Greek Coins - indo-greek coins
  • Greek Coins - lysimachos coins
  • Greek Coins - macedonian coins
  • Greek Coins - philip arrhidaeus coins
  • Greek Coins - philip ii coins
  • Greek Coins - philisto-arabian imitatives
  • Greek Coins - pontic coins
  • Greek Coins - ptolemaic coins
  • Greek Coins - rhodian staters
  • Greek Coins - seleucid coins
  • Greek Coins - siculo-punic coins
  • Greek Coins - syracusan coins
  • Jewish Coins - bar kochba revolt
  • Jewish Coins - herodian kings
  • Jewish Coins - king alexander jannaeus
  • Jewish Coins - king mattathias antigonus
  • Jewish Coins - King Yehohanan Hyrcanus
  • Jewish Coins - king yehohanan hyrcanus ii
  • Jewish Coins - roman judea capta
  • numismatic highlights
  • Roman Coins - coins of the great persecution
  • Roman Coins - constantius gallus
  • Roman Coins - crispus
  • Roman Coins - emperor allectus
  • Roman Coins - emperor antoninus pius
  • Roman Coins - emperor arcadius
  • Roman Coins - emperor aurelian
  • Roman Coins - emperor caligula
  • Roman Coins - emperor caracalla
  • Roman Coins - emperor carinus
  • Roman Coins - emperor carus
  • Roman Coins - emperor claudius
  • Roman Coins - emperor claudius gothicus
  • Roman Coins - emperor commodus
  • Roman Coins - emperor constans
  • Roman Coins - emperor constantine i the great
  • Roman Coins - emperor constantine ii
  • Roman Coins - emperor constantius i chlorus
  • Roman Coins - emperor constantius ii
  • Roman Coins - emperor diocletian
  • Roman Coins - emperor domitian
  • Roman Coins - emperor elagabalus
  • Roman Coins - emperor galba
  • Roman Coins - emperor galerius
  • Roman Coins - emperor gallienus
  • Roman Coins - Emperor Geta
  • Roman Coins - emperor gordian iii
  • Roman Coins - emperor gratian
  • Roman Coins - emperor hadrian
  • Roman Coins - emperor herennius etruscus
  • Roman Coins - emperor honorius
  • Roman Coins - emperor jovian
  • Roman Coins - emperor julian the apostate
  • Roman Coins - emperor licinius
  • Roman Coins - emperor lucius verus
  • Roman Coins - emperor magnentius
  • Roman Coins - emperor marcus aurelius
  • Roman Coins - emperor maxentius
  • Roman Coins - emperor maximianus
  • Roman Coins - emperor maximinus i
  • Roman Coins - emperor maximinus ii daia
  • Roman Coins - emperor nerva
  • Roman Coins - emperor numerian
  • Roman Coins - emperor philip i the arab
  • Roman Coins - emperor philip ii
  • Roman Coins - emperor probus
  • Roman Coins - emperor saloninus
  • Roman Coins - emperor septimius severus
  • Roman Coins - emperor severus alexander
  • Roman Coins - emperor tacitus
  • Roman Coins - emperor theodosius i
  • Roman Coins - emperor theodosius ii
  • Roman Coins - emperor tiberius
  • Roman Coins - emperor titus
  • Roman Coins - emperor trajan
  • Roman Coins - emperor trajan decius
  • Roman Coins - emperor trebonianus gallus
  • Roman Coins - emperor valens
  • Roman Coins - emperor valentinian i
  • Roman Coins - emperor valentinian ii
  • Roman Coins - emperor valerian i
  • Roman Coins - emperor vespasian
  • Roman Coins - emperor volusian
  • Roman Coins - empress aelia flaccilla
  • Roman Coins - empress crispina
  • Roman Coins - empress eudoxia
  • Roman Coins - empress fausta
  • Roman Coins - empress faustina junior
  • Roman Coins - empress faustina senior
  • Roman Coins - empress galeria valeria
  • Roman Coins - empress herennia etruscilla
  • Roman Coins - empress julia domna
  • Roman Coins - empress julia paula
  • Roman Coins - empress lucillla
  • Roman Coins - empress otacilia severa
  • Roman Coins - empress plautilla
  • Roman Coins - empress sabina
  • Roman Coins - empress salonina
  • Roman Coins - empress severina
  • Roman Coins - helena
  • Roman Coins - julia maesa
  • Roman Coins - julia mamaea
  • Roman Coins - julia soaemias
  • Roman Coins - licinius junior
  • Roman Coins - moulds
  • Roman Coins - Republican Coins
  • Roman Coins - vabalathus
  • Roman CoinsOLD
  • Roman gold coins
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Silver Denarius of the Emperor Hadrian, AD 117
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Silver Denarius of the Emperor Hadrian, AD 117
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Silver Denarius of the Emperor Hadrian, AD 117

Silver Denarius of the Emperor Hadrian, AD 117

Silver
Diam. 1.9 cm | Wt. 3.5 g
Diam. 3/4 in | Wt. 0.12 oz
C.3050
Enquire
%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22title_and_year%22%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_title%22%3ESilver%20Denarius%20of%20the%20Emperor%20Hadrian%3C/span%3E%2C%20%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_year%22%3EAD%20117%3C/span%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22medium%22%3ESilver%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22dimensions%22%3EDiam.%201.9%20cm%20%7C%20Wt.%203.5%20g%3Cbr/%3E%0ADiam.%203/4%20in%20%7C%20Wt.%200.12%20oz%3C/div%3E

Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Thumbnail of additional image
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Thumbnail of additional image
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 3 ) Thumbnail of additional image
Obverse: Laureate bust of the Emperor Hadrian, inscr. [IMP] CAESAR TRAIAN HADRIANVS [AVG] Reverse: Concordia seated, right arm holding out a patera, left arm resting on a statuette of the...
Read more
Obverse: Laureate bust of the Emperor Hadrian, inscr. [IMP] CAESAR TRAIAN HADRIANVS [AVG]
Reverse: Concordia seated, right arm holding out a patera, left arm resting on a statuette of the goddess Spes. PM TR P COS III

This coin can be very securely dated to AD 117, the year of Hadrian’s ascension to the Imperial Purple. After the unexpected death of Emperor Trajan following his Parthian campaign, Hadrian was appointed emperor in a turbulent political environment. Trajan’s latest additions to the Empire, in Armenia and Parthia, showed severe signs of unrest. A timely strategic retreat, although unpopular with the militaristic society of Rome, showed great statesmanship and promise in such a young Emperor. Hadrian’s ascent to the throne is a question of political intrigue and cunning machinations. Plotina, the wife of Trajan, was greatly involved in the late emperor’s death – she seemingly poisoned her husband as part of a plot against him. On August 10, AD 117, Trajan’s will was made public, in which the secret adoption of Hadrian as Trajan’s successor just the night before was revealed. Amongst the confusion and outrage of the Senate at such convenient and improbable circumstances, Hadrian responded with composure and a veiled threat, assuring the Roman Senate that the military had hailed him as imperator, supreme commander, and he could not refuse their will.

This coin is a wonderful example of a denarius, a silver coin weighing one eighty-fourth of a Roman pound (3.9 grams). A denarius was worth four sestertii, and one twenty-fifth of an aureus, the gold coin and most valuable currency denomination in the Roman Empire. The denarius was an important coin in the Roman world. A legionary’s daily wage consisted of a single denarius. A denarius was the average salary of a skilled worker or artesan’s daily toil. The average roman citizen would be exposed to the denarius as the highest form of currency. The aureus, the gold coin, would have been far too precious and impractical to spend, and out of reach for the majority of the people of Rome.

The obverse of this coin depicts Hadrian’s profile, facing right. He wears a laurel wreath, symbol of glory and wisdom, bestowed upon the commanding general’s head by his army upon triumph. His body bears no cloak or tunic. Hadrian is depicted with a beard, an innovative style for a roman emperor, and one which would become his signature look. Hadrian’s beard sought to imitate Greek fashion, of which he was an avid adherent. His love of Greek culture brought him the nickname ‘graeculus’, the little Greek, amongst friends and subjects alike. The inscription on the coin reads imperator, a military title which is the origin of emperor; Caesar, the surname of the Roman Imperial family; Trajan Hadrianus; his name; and Augustus, title appointed to Roman emperors by the Senate.

The reverse of the coin shows the goddess Concordia, goddess of peace and amicability, sitting on a throne draped in a tunic. She holds in her right hand a patera, a wide shallow ritual bowl without handles used in sacrificial ceremonies. Typically the patera was filled with wine or milk, which is then poured upon the heads of the victims or on the altar itself shortly before the sacrifice. Concordia rest her left hand on a statuette of the goddess Spes. Spes, meaning hope, is a divinity which was venerated since the inception of the Roman Republic. She is the origin of a famous roman proverb which has persevered into modern day Italy, which recites ‘Hope is the last to die’. This is in reference to the myth of Pandora’s Box, and its only remaining contents, hope, which was the last and indomitable resource humans have to battle the terrors unleashed upon the world. The inscription lists the titles awarded the Roman emperors. P M stands for pontifex maximus, ‘highest priest’, a title which today is held by the Pope. TR P, tribunicia potestate, means ‘tribune of the people’, an administrative representative role. C O S III refers to Hadrian’s third consular year and allows the precise dating of this coin.
Close full details
Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Previous
|
Next
3 
of  65

London

48 Albemarle Street,

London, W1S 4JW

info@barakatgallery.eu 

 

       


 

CONTACT | TEAM | PRESS 

 

Seoul
58-4, Samcheong-ro,
Jongno-gu, Seoul
+82 02 730 1949
barakat@barakat.kr
             

 

Los Angeles

941 N La Cienega Blvd
Los Angeles CA 90069
+1 310 859 8408

contact@barakatgallery.com

  


 

 

Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Send an email
View on Google Maps
Manage cookies
Copyright © 2025 Barakat Gallery
Site by Artlogic


Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences
Close

Join our mailing list

Sign Up

* denotes required fields