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This Roman coin depicts the Temple of Janus Quirinus, a building destroyed long before the Renaissance. A representation of the coin appears in a late sixteenth-century book of commentary, illustrating a specific passage in Suetonius’s biography of Augustus. In those lines, Suetonius recounts how Augustus closed the temple’s door—a gesture symbolizing the achievement of peace. This action is illustrated in the third scene on the Augustus dish, where the emperor closes the door to a temple clearly modeled after the image on the coin.
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Artwork Details
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Title: Sestertius of Nero, showing the Temple of Janus Quirinus
Date: 64–68
Culture: Roman
Medium: Bronze
Dimensions: 25.56 g
34.5 mm
Classification: Coins
Credit Line: American Numismatic Society, New York
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The Met's comprehensive collection of European sculpture and decorative arts reflect the development of a number of art forms in Western European countries from the early fifteenth through the early twentieth century.