Solidus of Phocas

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Dublin Core

Title

Solidus of Phocas

Subject

Phocas, Winged Victory

Description

Solidi were the highest denomination of coins in the sixth and seventh centuries in the Byzantine Empire. Made of gold, they were used to make substantial payments like a year’s taxes or a purchase of a manuscript. This solidus shows the Emperor Phocas on the obverse, with a cross on his crown and the globus cruciger in his hand. The text translates to ‘perpetually emperor’. On the reverse, a personification of victory holds a staff in the form of a cross and a globus cruciger. Religious imagery like this is common on coins. The mint mark ‘CONOB’ on the reverse signifies that the coin was made in Constantinople.

Source

Minted in Constantinople, Found in Beth Shean

Publisher

The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

Date

602-610 CE

Contributor

Luke Pelcher

Rights

The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

Relation

https://beth-shean.squarespace.com/solidus-of-phocas

Format

Gold, 18mm

Language

Latin

Type

Coin

Identifier

31-50-395

Collection

Citation

“Solidus of Phocas,” Byzantine Philly, accessed June 19, 2025, https://byzantinephilly.lcdss.reclaim.hosting/items/show/20.

Output Formats