Coins of the First Century Roman Governors of Judaea and their Motifs Cover Image

Coins of the First Century Roman Governors of Judaea and their Motifs
Coins of the First Century Roman Governors of Judaea and their Motifs

Author(s): David M. Jacobson
Subject(s): Ancient World
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: Judaean coins; procuratorial coinage; Roman provincial coinage; coin motifs; coin types; Roman prefects of Judaea; Roman procurators of Judaea; Roman Palestine; Second Temple period; Pontius Pilate

Summary/Abstract: This article examines the motifs on the coins struck in Judaea under the auspices of local Roman governors (prefects and procurators) between the dismissal of the ethnarch, Herod Archelaus, in 6 CE and the eve of the First Jewish Revolt which broke out in 66 CE. Although the governors were only designated by the title procurator from the mid-first century onwards, this series of coins is conventionally referred to as “procuratorial.” All are bronzes minted in Jerusalem in a single denomination, generally identified as the prutah, and bear aniconic motifs. Because they carry year dates, we know that these coins were issued fairly sporadically and the possible reasons for this are reviewed. The coin types are analysed and their respective origins and meanings identified. An attempt is made to assess the extent to which their motifs support the picture presented in the literary sources of the changing political climate in both in Judaea and Rome over the period in which these coins were minted.

  • Issue Year: 2019
  • Issue No: 26
  • Page Range: 73-96
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English
Toggle Accessibility Mode