Trajan, Rome mint, 99-100 AD.,
As (ø 26-28 mm / 10,23 g), copper, axes coin alignment ↑↓ (ca. 180°),
Obv.: IMP CAES NERVA TRAI-AN AVG GERM P M , (Imperator Caesar Nerva Traianus Augustus Germanicus Pontifex Maximus), his laureate head facing right.
Rev.: TR PO[T] - COS III P P / S - C , Victory flying l., holding palm branch in her l. hand, round shield (a clupeus) with S P / Q R in her r. hand; S - C across field.
RIC II, p. 274, no. 417 (common) ; BMC III, p. 153, no. 740 ; CBN 103 ; Strack 329 ; Coh. 628 .
Originally coins with a clupeus virtutis were struck in celebration of the Senate's award of the 'clupeus virtutis' of Augustus for the legions' success in Persia and Armenia.
Augustus was given an honorary shield called the clupeus virtutis, the shield of virtue, in 27 BC., a few years after Actium.
On the clupeus virtutis was inscribed the following (original lost, text taken from one of several copies):
SENATUS POPULUSQUE ROMANUS IMP CAESARI DIVI AUGUSTO COS VIII DEDIT CLUPEUM VIRTUTIS CLEMENTIAE IUSTITIAE PIETATIS ERGA DEOS PATRIAMQUE
"The senate and the Roman People dedicated to the emperor Augustus, son of the divine Caesar the shield for virtue, clemency, justice, and piety towards the gods and his native land".