The Gallic Empire

?So what if The Gallic Empire had survived?


By Jeremy Lovell
Updated: 1:03 p.m. ET Feb. 24, 2004

LONDON - Treasure hunters have unearthed a coin bearing the head of a virtually unknown Roman ruler who briefly held power in Gaul around A.D. 270 as the empire teetered.

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It is only the second coin ever found showing the head of Domitianus, who seized power — and the mint — in the breakaway Gallic Empire, which included modern England, France and parts of Germany and lasted for 15 turbulent years.

“We know next to nothing about Domitianus, except that he was ‘punished’ by the Roman Emperor Aurelian for treason,” Richard Abdy, curator of Roman coins at the British Museum, told Reuters. “But at least now we know what he looked like.”

Studied by coin experts
The first coin bearing Domitianus’ head was found in the Loire area of France in 1900, dismissed as a fake because his name was unknown and then lost from sight in a small museum in Nantes until very recently.

“It is now being studied by numismatists. When I showed our coin to the woman who has been working on it she jumped for joy because it bore out everything she had said about hers,” Abdy said, noting the French coin had been dated to A.D. 271.

The Gallic Empire was established in 260, when rule from Rome was weakening, by Postumus. He was succeeded nine years later by Marius, who held the throne for a matter of weeks before being strangled and in turn replaced by Victorinus, who ruled until 271 when he too was murdered.

Domitianus is believed to have murdered Victorinus, who had a habit of raping the wives of his subordinates, before himself being ousted by Tetricus. Tetricus ruled from 271 to 274, when he was defeated by Aurelian and the empire was restored.

Found on farmland
The British coin, which goes on show at the British Museum starting Wednesday, was found on farmland near Oxford just under a year ago as part of a hoard of 5,000 Roman coins fused together in an earthenware pot.

David Bebber / Reuters
A close-up of the coin found in Britain shows the image of Domitianus and an identifying inscription.
“It is a type of coin we know as a ‘radiant’ because there are rays radiating from his head. It is a two-denarii piece, which at that time, when they were coining money as fast as they could, would have been worth a couple of hours’ work,” Abdy said.

The base metal coin, which originally had a surface coating of silver, is now conservatively estimated to be worth a five-figure sum, Abdy said.

At the time it was minted, the once-mighty Roman Empire was undergoing a period of intense flux.

The years between 270 and 285 were marked by chaos in the empire, with more than 20 different emperors and 30 different pretenders fighting for power. Only one of these leaders died a natural death.
 
I could see that go two ways.

1) The center in Rome makes it its business to bring the upstart Gasllic emperors to heel and involves them in a 50-year war that saps the resources of both belligerents. Italy and Gaul fall to Vandal and Gothic invaders in the 390s with the emperorship transferred to Nicomedia. THe forces drawn from the East to fight the west and the forces from the west unavailable for war in the east now tell and instead of being checked at the Euphrates, the Sassanids get as far as Alexandria. Byzantium forestalled

2) The Gallic empire, unable to rely on Italy and the East for production or taxation, needs to develop production in its own lands. Its military power is concentrated along the northern frontiers (there is an unofficial peace with Rome) and the emperors in Trier, closer to the action, regard the border provinces as a higher priority. The west does eventually come under the control of Germanic kings, but its urban culture is stronger and its Roman heritage felt more deeply. The Rhineland and Bavaria speak a Romance language today.

Or indeed: the Gallic emperors are integrated into the Tetrarchy. Nothing else changes.
 
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