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First Christian
ruler of the Roman Empire
"imitate
without delay the example of (your) sovereign, and embrace the
divine truth of Christianity"
Constantine I came to the
throne when his father, Constantius, died in 306. After defeating
his rivals, Constantine became the sole ruler of the Roman Empire in
324, and is credited with social and economic reforms that
significantly influenced medieval society. In 313 his Edict of Milan
legally ended pagan persecution of Christians, and in 325 he used
imperial power to bring unity to the church at the Council of Nicea.
He also moved the capital of his empire to Byzantium, renaming it
Constantinople in 330. Constantine's embrace of Christianity
eventually led him to be baptized in 337. |
Eusebius
Pamphilius
"Chapter III.--Of his Picture surmounted by a Cross and having
beneath it a Dragon.
And besides this, he caused to be painted on a lofty tablet, and set up in
the front of the portico of his palace, so as to be visible to all, a
representation of the salutary sign placed above his head, and below it that
hateful and savage adversary of mankind, who by means of the tyranny of the
ungodly had wasted the Church of God, falling headlong, under the form of a
dragon, to the abyss of destruction. For the sacred oracles in the books of
God's prophets have described him as a dragon and a crooked serpent;
[Especially the book of Revelation, and Isaiah] and for this reason the
emperor thus publicly displayed a painted resemblance of the dragon beneath
his own and his children's feet, stricken through with a dart, and cast
headlong into the depths of the sea.
In this manner he intended to represent the secret adversary of the human
race, and to indicate that he was consigned to the gulf of perdition by
virtue of the salutary trophy placed above his head. This allegory, then,
was thus conveyed by means of the colors of a picture: and
I am filled with wonder at the intellectual greatness of the emperor, who as
if by divine inspiration thus expressed what the prophets had foretold
concerning this monster, saying that "God would bring his great and strong
and terrible sword against the dragon, the flying serpent; and would destroy
the dragon that was in the sea." [Isa. xxvii.] This it was of
which the emperor gave a true and faithful representation in the picture
above described." (Oration
in Praise of Constantine)

Isaiah 27:1
"In that day the LORD with his sore and
great and strong sword shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent, even
leviathan that crooked serpent; and he shall slay the dragon that is in
the sea."
Revelation 12:3
And there appeared another wonder in heaven; and
behold a great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and seven
crowns upon his heads. 4 And his tail drew the third part of the stars
of heaven, and did cast them to the earth: and the dragon stood before
the woman which was ready to be delivered, for to devour her child as
soon as it was born. 5 And she brought forth a man child, who was to
rule all nations with a rod of iron: and her child was caught up unto
God, and to his throne. 6 And the woman fled into the wilderness, where
she hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a
thousand two hundred and threescore days. 7 And there was war in heaven:
Michael and his angels fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought
and his angels, 8 And prevailed not; neither was their place found any
more in heaven. 9 And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent,
called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was
cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him. 10 And I
heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come salvation, and
strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for
the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our
God day and night. 11 And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb,
and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto
the death. 12 Therefore rejoice, ye heavens, and ye that dwell in them.
Woe to the inhabiters of the earth and of the sea! for the devil is come
down unto you, having great wrath, because he knoweth that he hath but a
short time. 13 And when the dragon saw that he was cast unto the earth,
he persecuted the woman which brought forth the man child. 14 And to the
woman were given two wings of a great eagle, that she might fly into the
wilderness, into her place, where she is nourished for a time, and
times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent. 15 And the serpent
cast out of his mouth water as a flood after the woman, that he might
cause her to be carried away of the flood. 16 And the earth helped
the woman, and the earth opened her mouth, and swallowed up the flood
which the dragon cast out of his mouth.
Revelation 13
2 And the beast which I saw was like unto a
leopard, and his feet were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the
mouth of a lion: and the dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and
great authority. 4 And they worshipped the dragon which gave power
unto the beast: and they worshipped the beast, saying, Who is like unto
the beast? who is able to make war with him?
Revelation 20:2
And he laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil,
and Satan, and bound him a thousand years,
Jonathan Edwards
"This revolution was the greatest revolution and change in the face of
things that ever came to pass in the world since the flood. Satan, the
prince of darkness, that king and god of the heathen world, was cast out.
The roaring lion was conquered by the Lamb of God in the strongest dominion
that ever he had, even the Roman Empire." (Work of Redemption, Period 3,
Section 2)
William S. Urmy in "Christ Came Again"
  
Israel P. Warren in "The
Parousia"
   
   
  

CHRISTIAN COINAGE
UNDER
CONSTANTINE
Numismatic
Chronicle - Constantine (1877 PDF)
"The type of these pieces and the inscription indicate how the
"public hope" was centered in the triumph of the Christian religion over the
adversary of mankind -- "the great dragon, that old serpent
called the Devil and Satan" (Rev. xii. 9 ; xx. 2), and Eusebius tells us how
Constantine I had a picture painted of the dragon -- the flying serpent --
beneath his own and his children's feet, pierced through the middle with a
dart, and cast into the depths of the sea."
Old coins and their
contribution. Considerable disparity exists among historians about the time
of Constantine’s conversion to Christianity and about the details of
his momentous vision. There is also debate as to whether history can
be deduced from the study of old coins or numismatics in general.
It appears that in all three cases, the ultimate judgment must rest with
each student, depending upon the degree of penetration and the quality of
study applied. Verifiable facts -- the external evidence -- do not always
explain the meaning of historical events or their internal significance.
The interpretation of history is often a subjective involvement, as
historians tend to provide their own understanding and interpretations.
An exemplary case of
historical interpretation based on ancient coinage and existing literature
is the following essay by the distinguished Constantinian Knight
Commander, Craig Peter Barclay, M.A., M.Litt.
The author has served as Keeper of Numismatics at the Yorkshire Museum in
York, U.K. and has previously held curatorial positions at the Royal Mint
and University of Aberdeen.
______________________
Hoc Signo Victor
Eris:
Christian Symbolism on the
Coinage of Constantine the Great
By
Craig Barclay
In a world without newspapers
and television, the circulating coinage provided a potent means for ruling
authorities to disseminate political and religious propaganda. Few such
authorities have been more conscious of the potential value of this medium
than the Roman emperors, and it can be argued that none of those made more
effective use of it than Constantine the Great.
As the first emperor to embrace the Christian faith, we
might expect that Constantine’s religious convictions would figure
prominently on the coinage of his reign. The degree to which this was
actually the case has provoked great deal of scholarly argument and, in so
doing, has provided a number of fascinating insights into the development of
religious symbolism in the fledgling Christian Empire.
General
As Andrew Alfoldi has rightly observed (p. 41), ‘The coin
types of the period are, in every case, mere feeble copies of those great
works of art that have not come down to us.’ Nevertheless, he would contend,
they have also provided us with ‘absolute proof that the Emperor embraced
the Christian cause with a suddenness that surprised all but his most
intimate colleagues.’ (Alfoldi, pp. 1-2)

(Fig. 1) Constantine the Great; bronze follis; AD
337-40
A more recent scholar, Andrew Burnett, however argues
that representations of pagan gods only disappear from Constantine’s coinage
after AD 318 and, even then, the designs that replaced them were primarily
religiously neutral in content. ‘The only explicitly Christian coin designs
were the representations of the emperor in an attitude of prayer, and a very
rare design used by the mint of Constantinople in about 327, showing a
banner with a chi-rho monogram spearing a serpent, representing his enemy
Licinius.’ (Burnett, p. 145)
Clearly the nature and significance of the designs used
by Constantine on his coinage are open to more than one interpretation. We
must accordingly address the complex question: ‘Can we see the Christian
faith of Constantine the Great reflected in his coinage?’
Sol Invictus
Flavius Valerius Constantinus was born in about AD 285 at
Naissus in Serbia, the son of the Tetrarch Constantius I and his wife, the
Empress Helena. After spending his early years as an effective hostage at
the courts of Diocletian and his successor Galerius, Constantine escaped to
the west, joining his father in York shortly before the latter’s death on 25
July AD 306. Proclaimed emperor by the army at York, Constantine spent the
next eighteen years disposing of his rivals for control of the empire
through an elaborate series of shifting political alliances and military
campaigns.
During the early part of his reign representations of
first Mars and then, from AD 310, Apollo-Sol dominated Constantine’s
coinage. Mars had been intimately associated with the Tetrarchy, and
Constantine’s use of this symbolism served to emphasise the legitimacy of
his rule. After his breach with his father’s old colleague Maximian in AD
309-10, Constantine began to claim legitimate descent from the third-century
emperor Claudius Gothicus. Gothicus had claimed the divine protection of the
Apollo-Sol . As Burnett notes (pp. 143-44), in AD 310 Constantine
experienced a vision in which Apollo-Sol appeared to him with omens of
success. ‘Thereafter his coinage was dominated for several years by "his
companion the unconquered Sol", SOLI INVICTO COMITI.’

(Fig. 2) Constantine the Great; bronze follis; AD
316-17
According to Lactantius, just prior to the Battle of the
Milvian Bridge in AD 312, Constantine experienced a dream-vision urging him
to trust the fate of his army to the Christian God, and to place the symbol
of the monogrammatic cross on the shields of his army. In his
Ecclesiastical History, Eusebius’s account of Constantine’s vision
differs slightly, claiming that Constantine experienced a vision at the
beginning of his military campaign wherein the symbol of the cross appeared
on the face of the sun, accompanied by the Greek words, ‘In this sign
conquer’. Subsequently, Eusebius tells us, Constantine experienced a second
vision, in which he was urged to use the Christian sign to protect himself
from his foes. In response to this latter vision, Constantine had a
labarum or standard produced, bearing the name of Christ in the form of
a monogram of the Greek letters X and P (the Chi-Rho).
Whatever the detail, Constantine duly placed his trust in
the Cross and duly defeated his imperial rival, Maxentius, on the outskirts
of Rome itself. Nevertheless, in the wake of this great victory, no
immediate change took place in the basic design of the coinage, with issues
celebrating Sol Invictus continuing to form the bulk of the
circulating medium. Indeed, as Vermeule (p. 180) explains, even in AD 313,
on the very eve of the Edict of Toleration, Constantine was still portrayed
on huge gold medallions in the company of Sol Invictus and bearing a shield
decorated with a representation he sun-god’s chariot.
Nevertheless, after the final defeat of Licinius, the
pagan gods disappeared from the coinage of Constantine, their place being
taken by religiously neutral images. The question might be asked as to why
Constantine did at last begin to make extensive use of specifically
Christian images at this time but, as Runciman (p. 17) bluntly reminds us,
‘The earliest Christians took little interest in art.’
Accordingly, during the early 4th century AD,
there were few artistic motifs available that could be relied upon to convey
a specifically Christian message. Even the Chi-Rho, which is today
universally recognised as a Christian sign, could be misinterpreted, Bruun
(p. 61) reminding us that, ‘The sign, at the moment of its creation, was
ambiguous. In essence it was a monogram composed of the Greek letters X and
P, and, while the monogrammatic combination of these two letters was by no
means unusual in pre-Constantinian times, the occurrence of X P with a
clearly Christian significance is exceedingly rare.’ The potential
significance of the sign would initially have been lost on the non
Greek-speaking population of the empire, who might more readily have
interpreted the sign as being linked to Solar or Mithraic worship.
Such initial ambiguities notwithstanding, there can be no
doubt that Constantine saw his victorious sign as being an explicitly
Christian symbol nor that, in the wake of the writings of Eusebius and
Lactantius, its religious meaning came rapidly to be universally recognised.
Constantine made only sparing use of the Chi-Rho on his coins, confining its
use to a few scarce issues only. Following his death however, this most
powerful symbol came to be used increasingly frequently, both as a means of
celebrating the religious convictions of the succeeding emperors, and as a
means of affirming the legitimacy of their succession from Constantine.

(Fig. 3) Eudoxia; gold solidus; AD 397-402
Although also adopted by Constantine’s sons, the most
prominent early use of the Chi-Rho occurred during the reign of the usurper
Magnentius (AD 350-53), who struck large bronze double centenionales
decorated with a large Christogram flanked by the Greek letters alpha and
omega. Thereafter the symbol appeared time after time on the coinages of
both the western and eastern empires, its position as the primary symbol of
the new state religion only gradually being superseded by the plain,
unadorned Cross.
Constantinus Orans
As the image of the emperor most commonly seen by the
public, the portrait of the emperor reproduced on the imperial coinage was
considered to be of the utmost importance. Constantine’s coinage portraits
break away from the traditions of the previous two centuries, calling upon
both earlier Imperial and Greek precedents for inspiration. The Imperial
beard, which had been sported by almost all emperors since the beginning of
the second century, was abandoned and replaced by a clean shaven image.
Likewise, the laurel wreath or solar crown which had dominated the coinages
of the second and third centuries were dropped in favour of an eastern
diadem, or, less frequently, a military helmet.

(Fig. 4) Constantine the Great; gold solidus; AD
326
One particular version of the new imperial image has
attracted particular attention. Eusebius (4.15) was quite explicit in his
statement that Constantine was portrayed on his coinage in an attitude of
prayer: ‘He directed his likeness to be stamped on a gold coin with his eyes
uplifted in the posture of prayer to God … this coin was current through the
Roman world and was a sign of the power of divine faith.’ Burnett recognises
this passage as important evidence implying ‘that important members of the
higher social classes noticed coin designs’, adding that ‘There can hardly
be any doubt that Eusebius had seen the coins in question’.

(Fig. 5) Constantine the Great; gold solidus; AD
326-27
Not all authors have accepted these coins as representing
the emperor’s devotion to the Christian faith and, as L’Orange has pointed
out (1947, p.34), the ‘heaven-gazing’ coin portraits of Constantine have
been the subject of numerous interpretations, including an argument that it
should be interpreted as a representation of the Sol-emperor Constantine
fixing his gaze upon the goddess Luna. L’Orange (1947, p.94) would
consequently argue that, ‘Constantine as Christian orant is, therefore, an
arbitrary interpretation of his heavenward-looking portrait. This does not
however alter the fact that the type became for Christians, perhaps owing to
the very weight of Eusebius’ authority, an expression of Constantine’s
inspired relation to their own God, a representation of the Christ-emperor.’
This argument has in part been fuelled by the undoubted
fact that the so-called Constantinus orans portrait type is
ultimately derived from pagan prototypes first seen during the reign of the
Hellenic monarch Alexander the Great (Toynbee, p. 148). Bruun (p. 33), who
does not accept that the coin type bears any specific Christian
significance, nevertheless concedes that the heavenward-gazing portraits of
Constantine recall ‘portraits of the Hellenistic ruler, whose heavenward
look expresses the inner contact between the emperor and the heavenly
powers.’
Most however have been more than content to recognise the
Christian spirituality of these most beautiful images. The heavenward-gazing
portrait is not peculiar to the coinage and Alfoldi (p. 34) recalls that
‘Apart from the monogram of salvation, the statues, paintings, and
coin-types displayed, throughout the Empire, the gaze of the "most religious
Majesty", directed heavenward’. The same point has been effectively argued
by L’Orange (1965, pp. 123-24), who noted in writing of a colossal head of
Constantine from the Palazzo dei Conservatori in Rome that ‘The eyes, being
supernaturally large and wide-open and framed by the accentuated concentric
curves of the deepcut lids and brows, express more clearly than ever the
transcendence of the ruler’s personality. In this gaze he travels far beyond
his physical surroundings and attains his goal in a higher sphere, in
contact and identity with the governing powers. Providence in person, the
irresistible controller of fate, fatorum arbiter, rises before us,
with all the future on his knees.’
Yet another distinguished scholar likewise observes that,
‘Long before his formal conversion to Christianity Constantine had
associated himself with purely Christian policy, and his finer portrait show
the upward-tilted head of the man with his mind on the heavens, or the
facing head, dazzling within its halo, of the world’s half-Christian
master.’ (Sutherland, p. 103). Irrespective of the pagan origins of the
orant portrait it had, through its adoption by Constantine, come to express
a wholly new significance. ‘The outward forms of expression remain very much
as before … But the inner meaning has completely changed. The pagan Emperor
was never clearly distinguished in nature from the deity whose vice-regent
he was: hence the divine attributes and all his pomp and state. The
maiestas of the Christian Emperor, the "vicarius Dei", is wholly
derivative: between him and his God there is a fixed and impassable gulf,
that between the creature and his Creator, which God-given Grace alone can
bridge.’ (Toynbee, p. 149)
It is significant that the orant portrait was used not
only on coins of Constantine himself, but also on coins struck during his
reign in the names of is appointed successors (L’Orange 1947, p. 91). After
his death in AD 337 however, Constantine’s sons made only very limited use
of the highly distinctive portrait, perhaps regarding it as being a
reflection of their father’s personal relationship with his God.
If the orant portrait did not long survive the death of
Constantine, other stylistic elements of his coin portraits did. From this
point onwards the imperial image reproduced on the coinage ceased to attempt
accurately to reproduce the actual features of the living monarch. Instead
the portraits became mere ciphers, representing a stylised rather than
personal image of imperial majesty. All of these images nevertheless
borrowed heavily from Constantinian prototypes adopting, for example, the
eastern diadem and clean-shaven features of the first Christian emperor.
Indeed, the clean shaven portrait came so closely to be associated with the
new faith that when the pagan emperor Julian the Apostate (AD 360-63)
briefly gained the throne, he swiftly adopted a bearded portrait in order to
disassociate himself from his Christian predecessors. With Julian’s death,
shaven portraits once again became the norm, remaining so until long after
the fall of Rome.
Helmet
Alfoldi (p. 27), in arguing that Constantine’s religious
policy was not based on ‘conscious ambiguity’, states that the appearance of
the Chi-Rho on Constantine’s helmet ‘on issues of coins from all quarters,
soon after the defeat of Maxentius, loudly and unmistakably claimed where
Constantine stood.’ He further asserts that, ‘We can prove beyond a doubt,
by the evidence of coin types appearing soon after, that Constantine caused
the monogram of Christ to be inscribed on his helmet before the decisive
battle with Maxentius’. (Alfoldi, p. 17)
Alfoldi (pp. 39-40) further states, in defence of the
significance of the Chi-Rho that, ‘Eusebius knows that Constantine not only
bore the Christian symbol on his helmet in the fight against Maxentius, but
continued to wear it in his golden, bejewelled helmet of state. When … the
representation of this helmet, that was new in its pattern, soon appears on
the coins, we cannot possibly regard it as a mere sign of zeal on the part
of Christian subordinates. The tiniest detail of the imperial dress was the
subject of a symbolism that defined rank, that was hallowed by tradition and
regulated by precise rules. Anyone who irresponsibly tampered with it would
have incurred the severest penalties. Especially would this have been the
case if anyone, without imperial authority, had provided the head-gear of
the Emperor with a sign of such serious political importance as that
attached to the monogram of Christ’.
A very similar position has been adopted by Voght (p.
90), who explains that, ‘we have other witnesses to the piety of the new
ruler of Rome and from these we learn that Constantine gave public
expression to his gratitude to his divine patron. The magnificent silver
medallion, whose obverse and reverse depict the conquest and liberation of
the city, was probably struck at the mint of Ticinum (near modern Milan) as
early as 313: and on the obverse the monogram appears, on the crested plume
of Constantine’s helmet. In a prestige issue of this type, the incorporation
of the Christ-monogram into the portrait of the emperor could only have been
done on the highest authority.’
Burnett (p. 146) similarly draws attention to the same
silver medallion (actually struck at Rome or Aquileia in AD 315) and a
series of small bronze coins struck at Siscia in c. AD 320. On all of these,
the emperor is clearly portrayed with the Chi-Rho symbol prominently
displayed on his helmet. ‘It is indeed hard to disassociate them from
Eusebius’s explicit statement that Constantine placed the Chi-Rho on his
helmet, but the very occasional nature of its appearance on coins should
make us cautious about making too much of this. On coins issued in about 322
at Trier, for instance, the chi-rho appears as the decoration on the shield
held by Constantine’s son Crispus; but it happened on only one die and must
represent the personal choice of a die engraver, as the other shields for
the same group of coins have different sorts of decoration on the shields.’
Even Bruun (p. 63), who is dismissive of the appearance
of the Christogram on some Victoriae laetae princ perp coins of
Siscia (describing them as ‘engraver’s slips’), accepts the symbolic
significance of the use of the same symbol on the silver medallions of AD
315, writing that, ‘The silver multiples with their facing portraits
represent an altogether different case. The Chi-Rho is here set in a badge
just below the root of the crest. The official character of the badge has
recently been demonstrated in a convincing manner. No doubt, therefore,
persists about the meaning of the new emblem: the emperor has adopted his
own victorious sign as a symbol of power.’
Labarum
The mint of Constantinople was in operation by AD 327,
some three years before the formal dedication of the city. A series of
bronze coins of that year celebrate the defeat of Licinius. The reverse of
this issue bears the legend Spes Publica, and portrays a serpent
being pierced by a Chi-Rho topped labarum.
For Alfoldi (p. 39), ‘The spectacle of the Christian
monogram on works of art and coin-types, the blaze of the initials of Christ
on the labarum, the new imperial banner, were all propaganda in the
modern sense’. Even Bruun (p. 64), whilst generally dismissive of the
existence of Christian symbols on the coinage of Constantine, is forced to
concede that ‘The problem of the labarum piercing the dragon on the
Constantinopolitan Spes publica bronzes remains.’
Whilst rarely used during Constantine’s reign, the
Christian labarum becomes a frequent and recurrent feature of the
coinage following his death, normally being closely associated with a
representation of a victorious emperor. One particular issue, struck at
Siscia in AD 350, makes specific reference to Constantine’s vision, bearing
the labarum accompanied by the legend Hoc Signo Victor Eris - ‘In
this sign shalt thou conquer’.

(Fig. 6) Constantius II; bronze coin of Siscia; AD
350
Mintmarks
During the Roman period coins were struck at a large
number of mints situated throughout the empire. As a quality-control
mechanism, the coins struck by each of these mints were required to bear
distinctive mintmarks, identifying their place of manufacture. The decision
to use the Chi-Rho or other apparently Christian symbols as mintmarks on
some of Constantine’s coins is dismissed by Bruun (p. 62) as being the
responsibility of procurators or, in one case, the rationalis summarum.
Approval to use these symbols was given ‘very far from the emperor and court
and comes sacrarum largitionum.’
Burnett (pp. 145-46) likewise acknowledges that the
Chi-Rho appears on a number of issues of coins ‘as one of the stock symbols
used for mint-marks’, but - like Bruun - argues that its use is more likely
to reflect the rise of Christian administrators to positions of authority in
Constantine’s regime rather than an official policy decision. Even if not
centrally authorised, the first use of Christian mintmarks can accordingly
be seen to be of the greatest significance, illustrating as it does the
shift in the status of Christians within the machinery of the Roman state.
Not surprisingly, in the years that followed, the choice of both the Chi-Rho
and the plain Cross came increasingly to form a key element of the privy
marks adopted by the empire’s numerous mints.
Cross-sceptre
On 17 May AD 330 Constantine dedicated his new eastern
capital of Constantinople. Alfoldi (p. 110) draws attention to ‘the small
bronze coins and medallions, issued in mass, on which the sceptre of the
"Tyche", the goddess who personifies the city, is shown the globe of Christ
- which means to say that the new capital is the ideal centre of the
Christian world-empire.’ As Alfoldi (p. 116) explains, ‘On the shoulder of
the personification of the New Rome is shown the globe of the world, set on
the cross of Christ, symbolising the new capital of Christendom.’
Bruun (p. 63) is dismissive of Alfoldi’s interpretation
of the supposed ‘cross-sceptre’ carried by the personification of
Constantinopolis. On the basis of an examination of related issues, he
argues convincingly that the ‘globe’ is no more than the globular end of a
reversed spear, and that the cross-bar seen on many coins is in fact merely
a two-dimensional representation of what was, in reality, a
three-dimensional disc. Bruun accordingly contends that these issues convey
no intended Christian significance.

(Fig. 7) Valentinian III; gold solidus; AD 455
Nevertheless, the supposed cross-sceptre was subsequently
perceived by many to have possessed a Christian significance and, its
original neutral status notwithstanding, it came to serve as a symbol of the
Church in its own right. On the coinage, this survival is well demonstrated
by an issue of large bronzes struck in the name of Valentinian II at Rome in
AD 378-83. On these rare coins the emperor is portrayed bearing a cross
sceptre tipped with a globular Chi-Rho, whilst on other later issues, the
cross-sceptre is shown in a greatly simplified form.
Divus Constantinus
After his death in AD 337, Constantine was deified by the
Senate, his sons issuing commemorative coins in his name in the traditional
style. Eusebius (4.37) records that, "A coin … (had) on one side a figure of
our blessed prince, with head closely veiled; the reverse showed him sitting
as a charioteer drawn by four horses, with a hand stretched downward from
above to receive him up to heaven".

(Fig. 8) Constantine the Great; posthumous bronze
coin; AD 337-40
Burnett (p. 146) observes that the iconography of his
metamorphosis, as represented on the coins struck to commemorate it, was
Christianised: ‘Previous emperors had ridden up to heaven in a chariot;
Constantine was received by the manus dei. The "hand of God" was,
with the Chi-Rho monogram, one of the most important Christian symbols to
appear on the coinage of the late empire.’ By way of illustration, a very
similar image to that appearing on the coins of the deified Constantine may
be observed on one of the panels of the early 5th century door of
the Church of S. Sabina in Rome. There the Ascension of Elijah is portrayed,
the prophet being conveyed heavenwards in a chariot with the divine
assistance of an angel. The manus dei also appears on many coins,
frequently crowning the emperor or his consort with a diadem or laurel
wreath.

(Fig. 9) Galla Palacidia; gold solidus; AD 426-30
Conclusion
Whilst there can be little dispute that the Coinage of
Constantine the Great did indeed express his religious convictions, it is
equally true that it was not exceptionally rich in Christian symbolism. As
Bruun (p. 64) reminds us however, ‘There was no independently Christian
artistic tradition. The Christian ideas now about to conquer the State had
to employ old means to express new conceptions.’

(Fig. 10) Honorius; gold solidus; AD 422
Constantine was nevertheless recognised by his
contemporaries and near-contemporaries as the first Christian emperor, and
through the writings of Eusebius, certain elements of his coinage came
inextricably to be associated with the triumphant faith. As Bruun correctly
records, ‘The victor is the official interpreter of history, and
Christianity was the true victor of the Milvian Bridge and Chrysopolis. Thus
Constantine’s victorious sign, his helmet, his seeming cross-sceptre and the
aura around his head were adopted by posterity as Christian symbols,
Christian signs of power.’ The Cross truly had triumphed.

(Fig. 11) Valentinian III; gold tremissis; AD
425-55
Bibliography
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