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Shop Roman Bronze Coin of Empress Fausta - NGC Certified (about 1700 years ago)
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Roman Bronze Coin of Empress Fausta - NGC Certified (about 1700 years ago)

from $66.37
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This is a professionally graded and certified Roman bronze coin (AE3 denomination) featuring Empress Fausta, second wife of Constantine the Great.

Technical Details:

Format: NGC certified protective slab

Material: Bronze

Denomination: AE3

Date: 307-326 AD

Note: Coin shown in images is an example only; actual coin may vary

Historical Significance: Fausta was the second wife of Constantine I (the Great) and played a significant role in the politics of the early 4th century Roman Empire. She was the daughter of former Emperor Maximian, making her marriage to Constantine a political alliance that helped legitimize his rule. Her coins are significant artifacts from a pivotal period when the Roman Empire was transitioning to Christianity and undergoing major administrative reforms under Constantine. Fausta's life ended tragically when she was executed by Constantine in 326 AD after being implicated in a plot against her stepson Crispus. This certified coin represents a tangible connection to the complex family dynamics and political intrigues of the Constantinian dynasty.

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This is a professionally graded and certified Roman bronze coin (AE3 denomination) featuring Empress Fausta, second wife of Constantine the Great.

Technical Details:

Format: NGC certified protective slab

Material: Bronze

Denomination: AE3

Date: 307-326 AD

Note: Coin shown in images is an example only; actual coin may vary

Historical Significance: Fausta was the second wife of Constantine I (the Great) and played a significant role in the politics of the early 4th century Roman Empire. She was the daughter of former Emperor Maximian, making her marriage to Constantine a political alliance that helped legitimize his rule. Her coins are significant artifacts from a pivotal period when the Roman Empire was transitioning to Christianity and undergoing major administrative reforms under Constantine. Fausta's life ended tragically when she was executed by Constantine in 326 AD after being implicated in a plot against her stepson Crispus. This certified coin represents a tangible connection to the complex family dynamics and political intrigues of the Constantinian dynasty.

This is a professionally graded and certified Roman bronze coin (AE3 denomination) featuring Empress Fausta, second wife of Constantine the Great.

Technical Details:

Format: NGC certified protective slab

Material: Bronze

Denomination: AE3

Date: 307-326 AD

Note: Coin shown in images is an example only; actual coin may vary

Historical Significance: Fausta was the second wife of Constantine I (the Great) and played a significant role in the politics of the early 4th century Roman Empire. She was the daughter of former Emperor Maximian, making her marriage to Constantine a political alliance that helped legitimize his rule. Her coins are significant artifacts from a pivotal period when the Roman Empire was transitioning to Christianity and undergoing major administrative reforms under Constantine. Fausta's life ended tragically when she was executed by Constantine in 326 AD after being implicated in a plot against her stepson Crispus. This certified coin represents a tangible connection to the complex family dynamics and political intrigues of the Constantinian dynasty.

Flavia Maxima Fausta Augusta[a] (died 326 AD) was a Roman empress. She was the daughter of Maximian and wife of Constantine the Great, who had her executed and excluded from all official accounts for unknown reasons. Historians Zosimus and Zonaras reported that she was executed for adultery with her stepson, Crispus.

Fausta was the daughter of the emperor Maximian and his wife Eutropia. As her age is nowhere outright attested, scholarly estimates have ranged from 289/290[4] to the end of the 290s.[5][6] To seal the alliance between them for control of the Tetrarchy, Maximian married her to Constantine I in 307.[7]

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