Maurice Tiberius (AD 582-602). AV solidus (21mm, 4.31 gm, 7h). NGC AU 4/5 - 3/5. Constantinople, 1st officina, AD 583/4-602. o N mAVRC-TIb PP AVG, pearl-diademed, helmeted, and cuirassed bust of Maurice Tiberius facing, wearing plumed helmet and pendilia, with globus cruciger in right hand / VICTORI-A AVGG A, Angel standing facing, grounded staff surmounted by staurogram in right hand, globus cruciger in outstretched left; star in right field, CONOB in exergue. Sear 481. The most capable of Justinian's immediate successors, Maurice Tiberius commanded armies during the Persian wars of Tiberius II and was raised to the rank of co-emperor shortly before the latter's death in AD 582. Maurice vigorously pursued the Persian war and was able to take advantage of their internal disputes by restoring the exiled Great King Khusro II to the Sasanian throne in AD 591, resulting in a favorable peace treaty. This freed up soldiers for the Balkan campaign against the invading Avars and Slavs, who proved difficult to dislodge. Maurice reorganized the Empire's western possessions by appointing viceroys called Exarchs in Italy and Carthage, enabling them to hold out for another century or more. The cost of continuing war had to be met by harsh taxation, making his regime unpopular, and the severe weather of the "little ice age" in the AD 600s-700s made for miserable fighting conditions on the northern front. In AD 602 the Balkans army mutinied and proclaimed a half-barbarian junior officer, Phocas, as emperor. Despite reigning with competence and integrity for 20 years, Maurice was overthrown and executed along with his entire family. His downfall opened the floodgates to a deluge that soon swept away the East Roman state entirely, replacing it with a diminished and very different entity we now call Byzantium. HID09801242017 © 2024 Heritage Auctions | All Rights Reserved
Price realized | 410 USD |
Starting price | 1 USD |