Pages 860-864
ii. EGYPT UNDER THE ROMANS
[R. S. Poole, Brit. Mus. Cat., Alexandria, &c., 1892 ;
G. Dattari, Numi Augg. Alexandrini, Cairo, 1901,
and also various articles in Riv. Ital. di Num., 1900, and following years;
G. Macdonald, Hunter Cat., vol. iii, 1905, pp. 402-566.]
' Augustus inter alia dominationis arcana . . . seposuit Aegyptum,'
says Tacitus (Annal. ii. 59). And down to the days of Diocletian the status
of the province remained exceptional. It was in a peculiar sense the property
of the emperor, and was controlled by a praefectus responsible to him alone.
Its unique position is reflected in the fact that it had a special currency of
its own. Roman gold is found in Egypt; but prior to circa A.D. 260 neither Roman
denarii nor Roman bronze coins appear to have been imported (N. C., 1908, p. 300).
The long series of Egyptian imperial money extends down to the brief reign of
the pretender Domitius Domitianus, A. D. 296-7, and includes coins struck in the
name of the Palmyrene Queen Zenobia and of Vaballathus. It begins with Augustus,
whose earliest pieces betray a desire to be regarded, not as a foreign ruler,
but as the direct heir of the Ptolemies. Except for the name and portrait, they
exactly resemble the Æ with Π and Μ described above as having been
minted by Cleopatra VII. The use of value-marks was soon abandoned. Simultaneously
novel types were introduced. It is, however, extremely improbable that any great
significance attaches to these changes. It was left to Tiberius to carry through
a radical reform.
In A. D. 19 the last-named emperor revived the Ptolemaic tetradrachm, the issue
of which had been in abeyance since Cleopatra's death. It was now struck not in
debased AR, but in the mixture of AR and Æ known as billon. Regimental pay-sheets
of the first century A. D. show that it was tariffed as roughly equivalent to
the Roman denarius, but that for purposes of exchange a distinct advantage rested
with the denarius, which was held to be worth 28 or 29 obols as against the normal
24 (Mommsen, Archiv für Papyrusforschung, i, pp. 273 ff., and A. von
Prernerstein, Beiträge zür alten Geschichte (Klio), iii,
pp. 8 ff.). The general effect of the reform was to facilitate commercial intercourse
between Egypt and the rest of the Empire. At first the billon tetradrachm weighed
over 200 grains and contained a fair proportion of AR. Deterioration rapidly set
in. One of the most notable debasements took place in the reign of Commodus, when
the percentage of AR was reduced to 10. The next great shrinkage began under Trebonianus
Gallus, and continued till the time of Diocletian under whom the tetradrachm weighed
little more than one-half of what it had originally done, while the proportion
of AR sank as low as 2 per cent. An indirect effect of this process should be
noted. The earlier emperors had all struck coins in Æ, pieces of very large
module being introduced by Nero and minted in enormous quantities by Trajan, Hadrian,
and Pius. Under Commodus the flow was suddenly checked, while under the later
emperors Æ is hardly known at all. There was no longer any room for it even
as a token-coinage. On the other hand, it is almost certainly to this period that
the numerous small leaden pieces that have come to light on various Egyptian sites
are to be attributed. They are in general badly executed and poorly preserved.
But there can be no doubt that they represent local issues intended to meet the
everyday wants of the ordinary population. The emperor's head is not placed on
the obverse. Otherwise the types are reminiscent of those of the imperial coins
proper. The few legends that do occur appear to have a local reference (Memphis,
Oxyrhynchus, Arsinoite Nome, Athribis, &c.). For the best account of these
difficult pieces see J. G. Milne, 'Egypto-Roman Leaden Token Coinage' (N. C.,
1908, pp. 287 ff.).
The tetradrachms and the imperial Æ always have the imperial portrait on
the obv. They were doubtless minted at Alexandria, which was at once the seat
of the government and the busiest commercial centre in the whole of the Roman
world. But the name of the city never appears except on certain alliance-coins
struck at Ephesus under Gordian III. Like the Æ of Cleopatra on which it
was modelled, the earliest Æ of Augustus was undated. Some time before the
close of his reign there was a resumption of the Ptolemaic fashion of placing
upon the coins the regnal year of the monarch in whose name they were issued.
This practice continued to be observed till the very close of the series, and,
since the Alexandrian year commenced on August 29, the dates and corresponding
inscriptions are often useful in elucidating obscure points of Roman imperial
chronology. As a rule, the year is indicated by a numeral letter or letters preceded
by the symbol L (see supra, p. 847). Occasionally, however, the symbol L is replaced
by {E}{T}{O}{Y}Σ (Hunter Cat., iii, pp. 424 ff., 459, 474, 543
ff., 547 ff., and 551). Sometimes, too, the actual numeral is written as a word.
This happens much more frequently in the case of {E}{N}{A}{T}{O}Υ
and {E}{N}{N}{E}{A}{K}{A}{I}Δ(ekatoυ)
than in the case of any other numbers. There appears to have been a superstitious
reluctance to employ the letter Θ in such a connexion (Riv. Ital., 1901, F
380). At the same time it is noteworthy that under Hadrian and Plus L {E}{N}{A}{T}{O}Υ
ushers in a series that runs as far as L {T}{RHO}{I}{SIGMA}{K}(aidekatoυ).
Very rarely we find, instead of LΙ, the words {PI}{E}{RHO}{I}{O}Δ
· {DELTA}{E}{K}{A}{E}Τ (Commodus), {PI}{E}{RHO}{I}{O}{DELTA}{O}C
{DELTA}{E}{K}{A}{T}Η (Severus Alexander), or {DELTA}{E}{K}{A}{E}{T}{H}{RHO}{I}C
{K}{Y}{RHO}{I}{O}{Y} (Gallienus)--obvious allusions to the
vota decenalia, a festival which was also commemorated by the placing of a palm
in the field of the rev. in the years that followed its celebration (Hunter
Cat., iii, p. 499 and p. 531).
Besides these variations, more or less marked modifications in the form of the
obv. inscr. or in the treatment of the imperial head, as well as changes in the
general character of the types of the rev., often occur at irregular intervals
in the course of a single reign; for details see Hunter Cat. iii, where they are
made the basis of classification. A good example is furnished by the billon coinage
of Nero. It falls into three quite distinct groups, corresponding to three successive
periods of time, and differentiated partly by the characteristics of the obv.
and partly by the use of three well-marked varieties of rev. type, to each of
which a special set of family portraits is attached. The first group is distinguished
by the frequent choice of personified qualities such as are common on Roman coins.The
second exhibits a preference for subjects drawn from Egyptian mythology and religion.
The chief feature of the third is the number of heads of Greek gods and goddesses.
Modifications of the nature described usually take place in the middle of a year.
As the year used for dating is the Alexandrian year, the inference is that they
coincide with the beginning of the Roman year, that is, with the date at which
a new official would naturally enter on his duties. Apparently, then, the moneyers
at Alexandria had considerable latitude in the selection of designs. Until about
A.D. 200 the types are most interesting. Thereafter there is much less variety,
and in the end the reverses are almost monopolized by figures of Victory and by
eagles. The eagle is, of course, no longer a Ptolemaic emblem. It is a compliment
to the garrison, being often shown standing between vexilla, while on coins of
Carinus and Numerianus it is accompanied by the legend {LAMBDA}{E}Γ Β
{T}{RHO}{A}Ι.
The more important of the types are discussed in detail by Poole in his Introduction
to B. M. Cat., Alexandria, &c. (q. v.). Here space forbids
anything beyond a simple enumeration:--
(α) Greek Types. Bust or fulll length figure of Kronos holding sickle.
Bust of Zeus ({DELTA}{I}{O}Σ {O}{LAMBDA}{Y}{M}{PI}{I}{O}Σ,
{Z}{E}{Y}Σ {N}{E}{M}{E}{I}{O}Σ) or full-length
figure enthroned ({Z}{E}{Y}Σ {K}{A}{PI}{I}{T}{OMEGA}{LAMBDA}{I}{O}Σ),
or recumbent on eagle. Bust of ZeusAmmon, or full-length figure in biga drawn by
rams. Bust of Hera ({H}{RHO}{A} {A}{RHO}{GAMMA}{E}{I}Α), or
standing figure. Bust of Posoidon ({PI}{O}{SIGMA}{E}{I}{DELTA}{OMEGA}Ν
{I}{SIGMA}{THETA}{M}{I}{O}Σ), or figure in biga of hippocamps or
standing holding dolphin. Bust of Apollo ({A}{K}{T}{I}{O}{SIGMA}
or {PI}{Y}{THETA}{I}{O}{SIGMA} {A}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{LAMBDA}{OMEGA}{N}),
or figure standing or seated; Apollo Didymeus, with stag and bow, sometimes between
Nemeses ; Apollo and Artemis; &c. Artemis Huntress. Bust of Athena, or figure
enthroned, or standing ({A}{THETA}{H}{N}{A} {SIGMA}{E}{B}{A}{SIGMA}{T}),
holding Nike, owl or ears of corn, sometimes before altar; Athena Stathmia; Athena
Archegetis of Sais; Athena and Demeter; Athena and Ares. Bust of Ares, or figure
standing. Bust of Demeter, or figure standing alone ({DELTA}{E}{M}{H}{T}{H}{RHO}),
or between the Dioskuri, or with Euthenia or Harpocrates. Persephone carried off
by Hades. Bust of Helios, alone or with Selene, or figure standing or on horseback;
see also Sarapis infra. Bust of Selene, alone or with Helios, or figure in biga.
Kybele enthroned. ; Bust of Dionysos, or figure in panther-car. Triptolemos in
serpent-car. Bust of Asklepios, or figure standing alone or with Hygieia. Bust
of Hygieia, or figure standing alone or with Asklepios. Bust of Hermes, or figure
seated or standing. Pan. Busts of the Dioskuri, or figures on horseback or standing.
{H}{OMEGA}{SIGMA} holding prancing horse. Nike, frequently and variously represented;
rarely with inscr., {N}{E}{I}{K}{H} C{E}{B}{A}C{T},
{N}{I}{K}{H} {K}{A}{T}{A} {GAMMA}{E}{RHO}{M}{A}{N}{OMEGA}{N}
(Domitian), {K}{A}{I}{SIGMA}{A}{RHO}{I} {N}{I}{K}{H}(Trajan),
{N}{E}{I}{K}{H} {K}{A}{T}{A} {B}{RHO}{E}{T}{A}{N}
(Severus and family). Tyche standing ({T}{Y}{X}{H} C{E}{B}{A}C{T}),
or seated, or recumbent on couch. Exploits of Herakles (Æ of Pius)--Nemean
lion; Hydra; Keryneian stag ; Erymanthian boar ; Augean stables; Stymphalian birds;
Cretan bull; Mares of Diomedes; Oxen of Geryon; Gardens of the Hesperides; Kerberos;
Antaeos; Herakles entertained by the Centaur Pholos; Destroying vines of Syleus;
Slaying the Amazon Hippolyte, the monster Echidna, &c. Perseus and Andromeda.
Orpheus charming the wild beasts. Judgment of Paris. {O}{K}{E}{A}{N}{O}{SIGMA}
as river-god.
(β) Egyptian and Graeco-Egyptian Types. Bust of {Z}{E}{Y}{SIGMA}
{SIGMA}{A}{RHO}{A}{PI}{I}{SIGMA} wearing modius. {Z}{E}{Y}{SIGMA}
{SIGMA}{A}{RHO}{A}{PI}{I}{SIGMA} or {H}{LAMBDA}{I}{O}{SIGMA} {SIGMA}{A}{RHO}{A}{PI}{I}{SIGMA}
standing or enthroned. Pantheistic bust of Sarapis, Zeus Ammon, Poseidon, &c.
Sarapis standing or seated, alone or with Demeter, Agathodaemon, Homonoia, &c.,
or between the Dioskuri. Bust of Isis, alone or with Sarapis, or figure standing
or seated, sometimes in temple or suckling infant Horus; Isis Pharia holding inflated
sail before Pharos lighthouse; Isis Sothis on dog. Hathor-Isis (?) (Hunter
Cat., iii, Pl. LXXXVI. 15). Bust of Harpokrates, or figure as infant or youth,
standing or seated on flower, finger at mouth. Bust of Hermanubis with palm-branch
and caduceus, or figure standing with jackal at feet. Bull Apis. Bust of {N}{I}{LAMBDA}{O}{SIGMA},
or figure with cornucopiae and reed, recumbent or seated, accompanied by crocodile
or hippopotamus, with Nilometer, or riding on hippopotamus or in biga of hippopotami;
sometimes associated with Alexandria, often with Euthenia (Abundantia),

FIG. 383.
once with Tiber ({T}{I}{B}{E}{RHO}{I}{SIGMA} {O}{M}{O}{N}{O}{I}{A}).
Bust of {A}{LAMBDA}{E}{XI}{A}{N}{DELTA}{RHO}{E}{A} (Fig. 383),
or figure standing holding bust of Sarapis, crowning emperor, &c. 'Canopic'
vases with heads of Isis and Osiris, sometimes in temple or on table. Serpent
Agathodaimon ({N}{E}{O} · {A}{GAMMA}{A}{THETA} · {DELTA}{A}{I}{M}).
Coiled serpent Uraeus. Birds and other animals--elephant, crocodile, hippopotamus,
ibis, eagle, hawk of Horos, griffin with wheel, sphinx, lion, &c. Miscellaneous--Pharos,
Imperial galley ({SIGMA}{E}{B}{A}{SIGMA}{T}{O}{PHI}{O}{RHO}{O}{SIGMA}),
temples, altars, buildings, modius in serpent-car, &c., &c.
(γ) Astronomical Types. Summer (Dattari, Nos. 2986-9). Autumn (Dattari,
No. 2985). Phoenix, inscr. {A}{I}o{N}, referring to commencement
of Sothic cycle (Year 2 of Pius=A.D. 139). Zodiac in circle round busts of Helios
and Selene. Two zodiacs in double circle round busts of Sarapis and Isis. Zodiac
in circle, with inner ring containing Sun, Moon, and major planets, round bust
of Sarapis. Head of Helios over lion, indicating the Sun in Leo; and similar representations
of the Moon in Cancer, Mercury in Gemini and in Virgo, Venus in Taurus and in
Libra, Mars in Aries and in Scorpio Jupiter in Aries in Sagittarius and in Pisces,
Saturn in Capricorn and in Aquarius. The zodiacal types all belong to the year
8 of Pius (cf. Riv. Ital., 1901, pp. 157 ff.).
(δ) Graeco-Roman Types. Bust of Roma, or {RHO}{OMEGA}{M}{A} seated
or standing. {DELTA}{H}{M}{O}{SIGMA} {RHO}{OMEGA}{M}{A}{I}{OMEGA}{N}
standing. Trophy between captives, sometimes with {A}{RHO}{M}{E}{N}{I}{A}
(Verus). Wolf and twins. Right hands clasped, sometimes with {O}{M}{O}{N}{O}{I}{A}
(Verus). {T}{I}{B}{E}{RHO}{I}{SIGMA} (see supra under {N}{I}{LAMBDA}{O}{SIGMA}).
(ε) Personifications of abstract conceptions. These are mostly copies
of familiar Roman types--{A}{PHI}{I}{E}{RHO}C{I}C (Consecratio),
{DELTA}{I}{K}{A}{O}{SIGMA}{Y}{N}{H}, {DELTA}{Y}{N}{A}{M}{I}{SIGMA}
(Venus Victrix), {E}{I}{RHO}{H}{N}{H}, {E}{I}{RHO}{H}{N}{H}
{K}{A}{I} {E}{Y}{THETA}{H}{N}{A}, {E}{I}{RHO}{H}{N}{H}
{K}{A}{I} {O}{M}{O}{N}{O}{I}{A}, {E}{LAMBDA}{E}{Y}{THETA}{E}{RHO}{I}{A},
{E}{LAMBDA}{PI}{I}C, {E}{Y}{THETA}{H}{N}{I}{A} (Abundantia),
usually associated with Nilus, Eutycheia (Felicitas), {K}{RHO}{A}{T}{H}{SIGMA}{I}{SIGMA}
(Virtus), {M}{O}{N}{E}{T}{A}, {O}{M}{A}{N}{O}{I}{A},
Eusebeia (Pietas), {PI}{RHO}{O}{N}{O}{I}{A}, {SIGMA}{H}{M}{A}{SIGMA}{I}{A}
(Female figure on galloping horse, brandishing sword), &c.
(ζ) Personal Types. Emperor seated, standing, on horseback; in biga
of centaurs, of elephants, of Tritons ; in quadriga of horses, of elephants; beside
prisoners, once with {B}{RHO}{E}{T}{A}{N}{N}{I} (Commodus
of A.D. 185-6); with Alexandria, Ares, Demeter, Nike, Pronoia, Roma, Sarapis,
&c. Hadrian welcomed by Alexandria. Bust of Antinous ({A}{N}{T}{I}{N}{O}{O}{Y}
{H}{RHO}{OMEGA}{SIGMA}) or Antinous on horseback as Hermes. Commodus as {RHO}o{M}{A}{I}o{N}
{H}{RHO}{A}{K}{LAMBDA}{E}{A}. And many others.
There still remain to be mentioned the curious series of Æ pieces which
bear on the rev. the names of the various nomoi or administrative
districts into which ancient Egypt was divided. These Coins of the Nomes
were not issued locally. They were struck at Alexandria, a circumstance which
robs them of the interest they would otherwise have possessed as calculated to
throw light on local cults. It is significant that the issues usually coincide
with specially abundant Alexandrian issues. We may infer that their purpose was
primarily commemorative. The emperors whose heads and names they bear are as follows:--
Domitian (Year 11), Trajan (chiefly Years l2-16), Hadrian (chiefly Year 11), Pius
(Year 8), and Marcus as Caesar (Year 8 of Pius). Generally speaking each set comprises
coins of one denomination only. The issue of Hadrian's Year 11 is exceptional.
It has usually two denominations, one of which is less than half the weight of
the other, while both are much smaller than was customary; the rev. type of the
lower is normally, but not invariably, an animal or other object which appears
on the rev. type of the higher as an adjunct of the standing figure of a divinity,
being, as a rule, held in the hand. The great majority of the subjects are taken
from the Egyptian pantheon. For detailed descriptions see B.M.C. and Dattari's
Numi Augg. Alexandrini. There were between sixty and seventy nomes in all,
and the names of about three-fourths of these occur on existing specimens, often
considerably abbreviated:--
{A}{THETA}{RHO}{I}{T}{E}C, {A}{LAMBDA}{E}{XI}andreon
{X}ora, {A}{M}{M}{O}{N}{I}{A}{K}{H}{T}{H}C
(?). {A}{N}{T}{A}{I}{O}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{I}{T}{H}C,
{A}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{LAMBDA}o{N}{O}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{I}{T}{H}C,
{A}{RHO}{A}{B}{I}{A}, {A}{RHO}C{I}{N}{O}{E}{I}{Y}{T}{H}C,
{A}{PHI}{RHO}{O}{DELTA}{E}{I}{T}{O}{RHO}{O}{LAMBDA}{I}{T}{H}C,
{B}{O}{Y}C{I}{RHO}{I}{T}aes, {GAMMA}{Y}{N}{A}{K}opolitaes,
{DELTA}{I}{O}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{I}taes {M}{E}gas,
{DELTA}{I}{O}{PI}olitaes {K}atotopon
, {E}{RHO}{M}{O}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{I}{T}{H}C, {E}{RHO}{M}o{N}{THETA}itaes,
{H}{LAMBDA}{I}{O}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{E}{I}{T}aes, {H}{RHO}{A}{K}{LAMBDA}{E}o{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{I}{T}{H}C
{N}{O}{M}{O}C, {THETA}{I}{N}{I}taes, {K}{A}{B}{A}Ctaes,
{LAMBDA}{A}{T}{O}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}itaes, {LAMBDA}{E}{O}{PI}{O}{LAMBDA}{I}{T}{H}C,
{LAMBDA}{H}{T}{O}{PI}olitaes, {LAMBDA}{I}{B}{Y}{H},
{LAMBDA}{Y}{K}{O}rolitaes, {M}{A}{RHO}{E}o{T}{H}C,
{N}{O}{M}{O}C {M}{E}{M}{PHI}{E}{I}{T}{H}C, {M}{E}{N}{DELTA}{H}C{I}{O}C
{N}{O}{M}{O}C, {M}{E}{N}{E}{LAMBDA}{A}{E}{I}{T}{H}C,
{M}{E}{T}{H}{LAMBDA}{I}taes, {N}{A}{Y}{K}{RHO}{A}{T}{I}C,
{N}{E}C{Y}{T}aes, {N}{O}{M}{O}C {XI}{O}{I}{T}{H}C,{O}{A}{E}{I}taes,
{O}{M}{B}{I}{T}{H}C, {O}{N}{O}{Y}{PHI}itaes,
{N}{O}{M}{O} {O}{XI}{Y}{RHO}{Y}{N}{X}{I}{T}{H}C,
{PI}{A}{N}{O}{PI}olitaes, {PI}{LAMBDA}{O}{Y}C{I}{O}{Y}(?),
{PI}{RHO}{O}Co{PI}{I}{T}{H}C, C{A}{E}{I}{T}{H}C
{N}{O}{M}{O}C, {N}{O}{M}{O}C C{E}{B}{E}{N}{N}{Y}{T}{H}C,
C{E}{B}{E}nnutaes {K}ato
topon, C{E}{THETA}{RHO}o{E}{I}{T}{H}C
{N}{O}{M}{O}C,{T}{A}{N}{I}{T}{H}C, {T}{E}{N}{T}{Y}{RHO}itaes,
{Y}{PSI}{H}{LAMBDA}{I}taes, {PHI}{A}{RHO}{B}{A}{I}titaes,
{PHI}{THETA}{E}{M}{THETA}onthis(?), {PHI}{THETA}{E}{N}{E}{O}{Y}taes.