1 Solidus (In the name of Heraclius and Heraclius Constantine; Cross with round ends) (629-796) front 1 Solidus (In the name of Heraclius and Heraclius Constantine; Cross with round ends) (629-796) back
1 Solidus (In the name of Heraclius and Heraclius Constantine; Cross with round ends) (629-796) photo
© Classical Numismatic Group, Inc.

1 Solidus In the name of Heraclius and Heraclius Constantine; Cross with round ends

 
Gold 4.36 g 21 mm
Description
Issuer
Avar Khaganate
Type
Standard circulation coin
Years
629-796
Value
1 Solidus
Currency
Solidus (629-796)
Composition
Gold
Weight
4.36 g
Diameter
21 mm
Shape
Round (irregular)
Technique
Hammered
Demonetized
Yes
Updated
2024-10-09
References
Numista
N#151494
Rarity index
94%

Reverse

Cross on four steps surrounded by nonsensical legend.

Script: Latin

Lettering: AOCCCCUMOUCCAOACC

Edge

Plain

Comment

The exact date-range of these pieces is not certain. For the beginning date, many sources list 610, since that was when Heraclius came into power; however, Heraclius Constantine was only born in 612 (he was Heraclius's son). Some sources say this coin was struck after 616, but seeing as how Heraclius Constantine has a mustache, it was probably much later than that (around 629 would make the most sense).

After Heraclius died in 641, Heraclius Constantine took over, ruling for only a couple months. While some sources list 641 as the end date, Heraclius seems younger in the portrait, meaning the original coin was most likely struck before that date. Even so, this is an imitation of a real coin, so it could have been struck anytime after 641. It is unlikely this coin was struck after 796, since that is around when Franks conquered the Avars, so that is the most likely end-date.

Interesting fact

One interesting fact about this coin is that it was used as a form of currency during the Avar Khaganate, a powerful tribal confederation that played a significant role in the history of Eastern Europe and the Byzantine Empire during the 7th to 9th centuries.