Redmond Rare Coins
Galerius AE Follis, Heraclea Mint, GENIO IMPERATORIS Reverse, Crescent Field Mark, c. AD 308–310
Galerius AE Follis, Heraclea Mint, GENIO IMPERATORIS Reverse, Crescent Field Mark, c. AD 308–310
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Here’s a tany little slab of late Roman ego: a bronze follis of Galerius Maximianus, one of the Tetrarchy’s heavy-handed emperors, struck at the Heraclea mint around AD 308–310.
The obverse shows Galerius facing right, laureate and absolutely convinced the empire is still functioning like a well-oiled machine. The legend reads:
IMP C GAL VAL MAXIMIANVS P F AVG
The reverse features Genius standing left, holding a patera and cornucopia, with the legend:
GENIO IMPERATORIS
Translation: “Here’s the protective spirit of the emperor, everything is blessed, prosperous, and under control.”
Reality: Rome was choking on civil wars, power grabs, religious persecution, inflation, and emperors multiplying faster than bad decisions at a coin show.
The reverse includes a crescent in the right field, with a Heraclea mintmark in the exergue, likely HTA or similar Heraclea workshop marking.
This coin has a strong imperial portrait, readable legends, dark ancient patina, and a reverse that actually has detail instead of looking like it spent 1,700 years under a tractor tire. Yes, there’s surface roughness. It’s an ancient bronze — not a freshly dipped Morgan dollar with delusions of MS-67.
Details:
Emperor: Galerius Maximianus
Date: circa AD 308–310
Mint: Heraclea, Thrace
Metal: Bronze
Denomination: Follis / reduced follis
Obverse: Laureate head of Galerius right
Reverse: Genius standing left, holding patera and cornucopia
Reverse Legend: GENIO IMPERATORIS
Field Mark: Crescent
Mintmark: Heraclea, likely HTA
Condition: VF details, ancient surface roughness
Bottom line: a sharp, moody late Roman bronze from the era when the empire was pretending it had a plan — and history was already laughing.
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