The Wonderful World of Ancient Coin Collecting
Coinage of the Roman Empire


Obverse
 
Reverse

Coin Details

 

Set Details

Coin Description:
Grade: NGC Ch F Strike: 5/5 Surface: 4/5
Grade Comment: sand patina
Owner: RAM-VT
 
Set Category: Ancients
Set Name: The Wonderful World of Ancient Coin Collecting
Slot Name: Coinage of the Roman Empire
Research: Currently not available

Owner's Description

Judaea King Herod Archelaus, 4 BC-6 CE Bronze Prutah - Hendin 505/ Meshorer 73 Jerusalem mint Grade: Ch Fine: Strike 5/5: Surface 5/5 Census - NGC does not provide census info on ancient coins :>( OBV.: Bunch Of Grapes On Vine With Small Leaf On Left. above-HPW(delta)OY (HEROD) Rev.: Tall helmet with crest. ???????, (will not insert grek letters) Herod Archelaus (23 BC – c. 18 AD) was the ethnarch of Samaria, Judea, and Idumea (biblical Edom) from 4 BC to 6 AD. He was the son of Herod the Great and Malthace the Samaritan, the brother of Herod Antipas, and the half-brother of Herod Philip I. Archelaus received the Tetrarchy of Judea by the last will of his father, though a previous will had bequeathed it to his brother Antipas. He was proclaimed king by the army, but declined to assume the title until he had submitted his claims to Caesar Augustus in Rome. Before setting out, he quelled with the utmost cruelty a sedition of the Pharisees, slaying nearly three thousand of them. In Rome he was opposed by Antipas and by many of the Jews, who feared his cruelty; but in 4 BC Augustus allotted to him the greater part of the kingdom (Samaria, Judea, and Idumea) with the title of ethnarch (not king) until 6 AD when Judaea province was formed, under direct Roman rule, at the time of the Census of Quirinius. The first wife of Archelaus is given by Josephus simply as Mariamne, perhaps Mariamne III (Mariamne bint Aristobulus), whom he divorced to marry Glaphyra. She was the widow of Archelaus' brother Alexander, though her second husband, Juba, king of Mauretania, was alive. This violation of the Mosaic law along with Archelaus' continued cruelty roused the ire of the Jews, who complained to Augustus. Archelaus was deposed in the year 6 and banished to Vienne in Gaul; Samaria, Judea proper, and Idumea became the Roman province of Iudaea. My cost was $47

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