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ADVENTVS


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   ADVENTUS. - Inscriptions of this kind commemorate the imperial sovereign's arrival at Rome, either at the commencement of his reign, or on his return from a distance. They also refer to his advent in some city or province of the empire. At their accession to the throne, emperors were not conveyed in a chariot nor in any other vehicle, but went on horseback, and sometimes even on foot; and thus they made their first public entry into the capital of the Roman world. The fact of the equestrian procession of emperors into Rome, even if it were not authenticated from other sources, is abundantly established, by the type of an Imperator eques, accompanying the legend of ADVENTVS AVGVSTI, stamped on so numerous a series of coins. the other custom, viz., that of their arriving on horseback at the gates of the city, and their entering it on foot, is not, and indeed could not, with the same degree of clearness, be elucidated by means of monetal designs; but the fact is described by Dion Cassius, in his account of Septimius Severus' pedestrian entry into Rome. - That emperors occasionally set out from the city on foot is shown on a large brass of Caracalla, the reverse type of which represents him marching, followed by a soldier. - See PROFECTIO AVG.  The Emperor's departure.

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ADVENTVS


Please |help| us convert the |Dictionary of Roman Coins| from scans to text by typing the original text here. Please add updates or make corrections to the NumisWiki text version as appropriate.
   ADVENTUS. - Inscriptions of this kind commemorate the imperial sovereign's arrival at Rome, either at the commencement of his reign, or on his return from a distance. They also refer to his advent in some city or province of the empire. At their accession to the throne, emperors were not conveyed in a chariot nor in any other vehicle, but went on horseback, and sometimes even on foot; and thus they made their first public entry into the capital of the Roman world. The fact of the equestrian procession of emperors into Rome, even if it were not authenticated from other sources, is abundantly established, by the type of an Imperator eques, accompanying the legend of ADVENTVS AVGVSTI, stamped on so numerous a series of coins. the other custom, viz., that of their arriving on horseback at the gates of the city, and their entering it on foot, is not, and indeed could not, with the same degree of clearness, be elucidated by means of monetal designs; but the fact is described by Dion Cassius, in his account of Septimius Severus' pedestrian entry into Rome. - That emperors occasionally set out from the city on foot is shown on a large brass of Caracalla, the reverse type of which represents him marching, followed by a soldier. - See PROFECTIO AVG.  The Emperor's departure.

View whole page from the |Dictionary Of Roman Coins|