Arminius Numismatics

money sorted by region or empire


Startseite Kontakt Sidebar Registrieren Anmelden
Albenliste Neueste Uploads Neueste Kommentare Am meisten angesehen Am besten bewertet Meine Favoriten Suche
Galerie > Ancient World > Hispania Antiqua > Bolskan - Osca
Osca (Bolskan) in Hispania, Tiberius, Quadrans, RPC 293.
Osca (modern Huesca, the Iberian city Bolskan) in Hispania, Tiberius, issued by duoviri M Aelius Maxumus and Q. Aelius Proculus, 14-37 AD., 
Æ Quadrans (16-18 mm / 3,35 g), 
Obv.: TI CAESAR P M , laureate head of Tiberius right. 
Rev.: OSCA , in wreath. 
RPC I, 116, 293 (5 specimens) .

Huesca (Aragonese: Uesca; Latin: Osca; Greek: Oσκα, Ptol. ii. 6. § 68) is a city in Aragon, Spain. Huesca is the capital of the Spanish province of the same name. In 2006 it had a population of 49,312.

Its pre-Roman Iberian name was Bolskan, the capital of the Ilergetes, in the north of Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from Tarraco (modern Tarragona) and Ilerda (modern Lleida) to Caesaraugusta (modern Zaragoza) (Itin. Ant. pp. 391, 451), and under the jurisdiction of the last-named city. Pliny alone (iii. 3. s. 4) places the Oscenses in Vescitania, a district mentioned nowhere else. The city's name was rendered as Osca, and was a Roman colony, Urbs Victrix Osca, during the Roman Empire. Under the impetus of Quintus Sertorius, the renegade Roman and Iberian hero who made Osca his base, the city minted its own coinage and was the site of a prestigious school founded by Sertorius to educate young Iberians in Latin and Romanitas in general. We learn from Plutarch (Sert. c. 14) that it was a large town, and the place where Sertorius died. It is probably the town called Ileoscan (Iλεόσκαν) by Strabo, in an apparently corrupt passage (iii. p. 161; v. Ukert, vol. ii. pt. 1. p. 451.) It seems to have possessed silver mines (Livy xxxiv. 10, 46, xl. 43), unless the argentum Oscense here mentioned merely refers to the minted silver of the town. Florez, however (Med. ii. 520), has pointed out the impossibility of one place supplying such vast quantities of minted silver as we find recorded in ancient writers under the terms argentum Oscense, signatum Oscense; and is of the opinion that "Oscense" in these phrases means "Spanish", being a corruption of "Eus-cara". (Cf. Caes. B.C. i. 60; Vell. Pat. ii. 30; "Euskara", Basque for the Basque language.)

The fully Romanised city, with its forum in the Cathedral square, was made a municipium by decree of Augustus in 30 BCE. It was renamed Wasqah during the period of Arab domination, when the fortified city was a stronghold defending the frontier against the Christian counts and local kings of the Pyrenees. In 1094 Sancho Ramirez built the nearby Montearagon castle with the intention of laying siege to Wasqah; here he met his death by a stray arrow as he was reconnoitring the city's walls. It was conquered in 1096 by Peter I of Aragon.

During the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) the "Huesca Front" for about two years was the scene of some of the worst fighting between the Republicans and Franco's army. The city was besieged by the Republicans, George Orwell among them (in February 1937, George Orwell was stationed near the falangist-held Huesca as a member of the POUM militia) but never fell.
Schlüsselwörter: Osca Bolskan Huesca Hispania Tiberius Quadrans Wreath

Osca (Bolskan) in Hispania, Tiberius, Quadrans, RPC 293.

Osca (modern Huesca, the Iberian city Bolskan) in Hispania, Tiberius, issued by duoviri M Aelius Maxumus and Q. Aelius Proculus, 14-37 AD.,
Æ Quadrans (16-18 mm / 3,35 g),
Obv.: TI CAESAR P M , laureate head of Tiberius right.
Rev.: OSCA , in wreath.
RPC I, 116, 293 (5 specimens) .

Huesca (Aragonese: Uesca; Latin: Osca; Greek: Oσκα, Ptol. ii. 6. § 68) is a city in Aragon, Spain. Huesca is the capital of the Spanish province of the same name. In 2006 it had a population of 49,312.

Its pre-Roman Iberian name was Bolskan, the capital of the Ilergetes, in the north of Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from Tarraco (modern Tarragona) and Ilerda (modern Lleida) to Caesaraugusta (modern Zaragoza) (Itin. Ant. pp. 391, 451), and under the jurisdiction of the last-named city. Pliny alone (iii. 3. s. 4) places the Oscenses in Vescitania, a district mentioned nowhere else. The city's name was rendered as Osca, and was a Roman colony, Urbs Victrix Osca, during the Roman Empire. Under the impetus of Quintus Sertorius, the renegade Roman and Iberian hero who made Osca his base, the city minted its own coinage and was the site of a prestigious school founded by Sertorius to educate young Iberians in Latin and Romanitas in general. We learn from Plutarch (Sert. c. 14) that it was a large town, and the place where Sertorius died. It is probably the town called Ileoscan (Iλεόσκαν) by Strabo, in an apparently corrupt passage (iii. p. 161; v. Ukert, vol. ii. pt. 1. p. 451.) It seems to have possessed silver mines (Livy xxxiv. 10, 46, xl. 43), unless the argentum Oscense here mentioned merely refers to the minted silver of the town. Florez, however (Med. ii. 520), has pointed out the impossibility of one place supplying such vast quantities of minted silver as we find recorded in ancient writers under the terms argentum Oscense, signatum Oscense; and is of the opinion that "Oscense" in these phrases means "Spanish", being a corruption of "Eus-cara". (Cf. Caes. B.C. i. 60; Vell. Pat. ii. 30; "Euskara", Basque for the Basque language.)

The fully Romanised city, with its forum in the Cathedral square, was made a municipium by decree of Augustus in 30 BCE. It was renamed Wasqah during the period of Arab domination, when the fortified city was a stronghold defending the frontier against the Christian counts and local kings of the Pyrenees. In 1094 Sancho Ramirez built the nearby Montearagon castle with the intention of laying siege to Wasqah; here he met his death by a stray arrow as he was reconnoitring the city's walls. It was conquered in 1096 by Peter I of Aragon.

During the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) the "Huesca Front" for about two years was the scene of some of the worst fighting between the Republicans and Franco's army. The city was besieged by the Republicans, George Orwell among them (in February 1937, George Orwell was stationed near the falangist-held Huesca as a member of the POUM militia) but never fell.

Diese Datei bewerten - derzeitige Bewertung : 0/5 mit 1 Stimme(n)
Datei-Information
Dateiname:TiQuaOsc.jpg
Name des Albums:Arminius / Bolskan - Osca
Bewertung (1 Stimmen):00000(Details anzeigen)
Schlüsselwörter:Osca / Bolskan / Huesca / Hispania / Tiberius / Quadrans / Wreath
Dateigröße:121 KB
Hinzugefügt am:%15. %423 %2008
Abmessungen:1024 x 517 Pixel
Angezeigt:59 mal
URL:http://www.arminius-numismatics.com/coppermine1414/cpg15x/displayimage.php?pid=2181
Favoriten:zu Favoriten hinzufügen