HAIRMEDICO.FR ≡ Women’s Kilt Miscellaneous Men’s Tartan & Wool Kilts Bangles
  • Certified By Ngc

  • *Nero, as Apollo, Playing Lyre* Roman Empire – Nero (r. 54-68 AD) Bronze As – NGC Ch XF, Fine Style & Extremely Rare

*Nero, as Apollo, Playing Lyre* Roman Empire – Nero (r. 54-68 AD) Bronze As – NGC Ch XF, Fine Style & Extremely Rare

$43.82 $85.45
Description Roman Empire. Twelve Caesars. Nero (r. 54-68 AD) AE (Bronze) as. Mint of Rome; struck ca. 62-68 AD. Graded Choice XF 5/5 - 2/5, Fine Style by NGC. A fascinating historically relevant type featuring the emperor Nero playing the lyre. The historian Suetonius, author of the Lives of the Twelve Caesars, famously recounts how Nero attempted to emulate the god Apollo and was fond of musical performances. Suetonius is also the source for the famous slogan "Nero fiddled while Rome burned," depicting the emperor as carried away in his trivial pursuits while his city was engulfed by flames in the Great Fire of 64 AD. Extremely rare; potentially one of less than five specimens in private hands, and one of the finest known. This coin is itself mentioned by Suetonius, one of the few times a specific type of ancient coin is directly mentioned in a historical text. The author writes, "he [Nero] placed the sacred crowns in his bed-chambers around the couches, as well as statues representing him in the guise of a lyre-player; and he had a coin too struck with the same device." (Suetonius, Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Nero, 25.2).   Design: Laureate bust of Nero right / Nero, in the guise of Apollo Citharoedus, walking right while playing the lyre; S-C (Senatus Consulto) across fields Reference: RIC I 212. Dimensions: 23 mm / 8.11 gm Condition: NGC Choice XF 5/5 - 2/5, Fine Style. Extremely rare and of great historical fascination and importance. A truly premier piece.   Nero One of the more famous names from Roman history, Nero was controversial in his own time and remains so. If anything, he has enjoyed something of a renaissance among modern scholars, who have illuminated the obvious biases of many of the negative accounts against him. He was the last emperor of the family of Augustus (his great-great-grandfather) and the son of Agrippina the Younger, an astute political maneuverer who managed to ensure Nero’s succession over her husband Claudius’ blood son, Britannicus. Nero’s reign saw the flourishing of the Silver Age of Latin literature – the Stoic philosopher Seneca was Nero’s personal tutor and later a key advisor. During his reign, Nero fought two major wars at opposite ends of Roman territory. One was a five-year stalemate with Parthia over the Armenian borderlands; the other was the revolt of the British queen Boudicca in 61 AD, which was quelled with great difficulty. But Nero himself did not participate in either of these wars, delegating them to his generals Corbulo and Suetonius (unrelated to the later author). He preferred to live a comfortable life in Rome, spending much time putting on games for the people, as well as personally appearing in the contests as a charioteer. He also loved the arts, patronizing them extensively as well as frequently performing as an actor, poet, and musician. For all these passions, the aristocratic Roman Senate loathed him, seeing him as weak and effeminate. However, though our sources for their voices are limited, it seems that the people of Rome loved him. He levied higher taxes on the rich to help fund his generous games and handouts to the common people in Rome, which by now was home to a million people. Once again, this earned him the hatred of the aristocrats who wrote all the histories of his reign. Nero is criticized above all for his conduct surrounding the Great Fire of Rome in 64 AD, which burned for six days in July and destroyed 70% of the city’s dwellings. The legend that Nero “fiddled while Rome burned,” comes from Cassius Dio, and Dio is joined by Suetonius and Tacitus in the claim that Nero deliberately started the fires to clear an area for a new palace, the Domus Aurea (Golden House). That may be true, but we must remember that all three of these authors were the same aristocrats that Nero taxed highly to fund public games and social welfare programs and who were offended by Nero’s fondness for the arts. What is certain is that Nero blamed the fire on a new religious sect, the Christians, whom he began to persecute. Among the early Christian martyrs killed in Nero’s persecutions were St. Peter and St. Paul. This has understandably earned Nero a bad reputation among Christian historians, which compounded his already sour press from the Roman aristocrats of his time. The true Nero may be difficult for us to understand today, but it is worth spending time to discern the character of the last of the Julio-Claudians.
Certified By Ngc

Certified By Ngc

  • Greek, Italy – Calabria, Tarentum (ca. 302-280 BC) Silver Nomos – Warrior/Phalanthos – NGC Choice XF 4/5 – 4/5
    $48.21 $61.23
  • Greek, Classical – Sicily, Gela (ca. 420-405 BC) Bronze Tetras – NGC Choice VF, Fine Style
    $39.91 $52.68
  • Classical Period – Cilicia, Mallus (ca. 440-385 BC) Silver Stater – Cronus, Lord of Time – NGC Choice VF
    $65.72 $79.52
  • Greek, Italy – Calabria, Tarentum (ca. 302-280 BC) Silver Nomos – Warrior/Phalanthos Riding Dolphin
    $63.79 $91.86
  • Thrace – Lysimachus (r. 306-281 BC) Silver Tetradrachm – Portrait of Alexander the Great, NGC VG 5/5 – 3/5
    $49.82 $76.72
  • Roman Republic – P. Clodius Turrinus (42 BC) Silver Denarius, Apollo/Diana – NGC Fine
    $44.7 $84.04
  • Byzantine Empire – Constantine IV (r. 668-685 AD) Gold Solidus – NGC AU
    $55.95 $99.03
  • Second Punic War – Bruttium, the Brettii (ca. 211-208 BC) Bronze Didrachm – Ares/Athena – NGC Ch VF
    $39.15 $64.99
  • Roman Republic – Octavian (Augustus) Silver Portrait Denarius (30-29 BC) – Herm of Jupiter – NGC VF
    $64.31 $86.18
  • Roman Republic – L. Livineius Regulus (42 BC) Silver Portrait Denarius – NGC Fine
    $36.5 $65.33
  • Celtic Tribes, Danube Region (ca. 2nd Century BC) Silver Tetradrachm – Zeus/Horse – NGC XF 5/5 – 2/5
    $57.42 $89
  • Greek, Classical – Caria, Mylasa (ca. 450-400 BC) Silver Hemiobol – Lion/Scorpion – NGC Ch F
    $63.71 $119.77
  • Greek, Early Classical – Thessaly, Larissa (ca. 479-460 BC) Silver Obol – NGC XF
    $56.65 $70.25
  • Macedon – Demetrius I Poliorcetes (r. 306-283 BC) Silver Tetradrachm, Pella – Poseidon Reverse, NGC VF
    $51.04 $77.07
  • Greek, Classical – Thessaly, Larissa (ca. 356-342 BC) Silver Drachm, Facing Nymph/Horse- NGC XF & Fine Style
    $46.29 $85.64
  • *Gleaming Golden Alexander* Pontus – Mithradates VI Eupator (88-86 BC) Gold Stater, First Roman War Issue – NGC AU 4/5 – 4/5
    $60.88 $94.36

© 2026 - HAIRMEDICO.FR