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Eugenius: Numismatists Getting the Evidence Wrong


guy

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As someone who doesn't collect coins, I have frequently admired the ability of experts in Ancient numismatists to decipher the sometimes scant evidence to better understand Ancient Roman culture and history.

I've been studying this coin of Eugenius (ruled AD 392-394):

post-3665-0-45032400-1384311220_thumb.jpgpost-3665-0-05249200-1384311222_thumb.jpg
(click on image to see enlaged)

DN.EVGENIVS.P.F.AVG. Laureate head right. R/: VIRTVS.ROMANVRVM. Roma seated left, holding Victory on globe and long sceptre.TRPS in ex. RIC 106d.


Eugenius was elevated to the purple by the Frankish general Arbogast during the reign of the Emperor Theodosius.

The traditional story was that Eugenius was very sympathetic to the Pagans and he really was only a nominal Christian. He certainly had the support of the predominately Pagan Roman Senate (despite possibly strangely not being confirmed by that pro-Pagan Senate).

According to popular history, Eugenius promoted some of the Pagan policies and supported Pagan temples, both of which had fallen out of favor because of recent intolerant Christian emperors. He and his general Arbogast, however, lost
the pivotal and bloody battle of Frigidus against the militantly Christian Emperor Theodosius. Both the usurper and his general soon lost their lives: Eugenius was captured and killed, while Arbogast committed suicide. Eugenius was the
last emperor to support polytheism.

Many historians cling to the idea that this was the last stand of the noble and enlightened Pagans against the intolerant and culturally ignorant Christians.

Numismatists have supported this rendition of history, too. They point out that Eugenius wears a beard on his coin (rare among Christian emperors). This, they contend, is indicative of Eugenius' being a philosopher and, thus, more tolerant of Pagans. But wait. This widely accepted story might be incorrect.

Alan Cameron in his book The Last Pagans of Rome reminds us that Eugenics was a teacher of rhetoric, not philosophy. Cameron mentions incidentally that Christ, the apostles, and the saints are also shown in the style of philosophers with a beard.

Cameron writes :
 

Quote

[T]he main focus of much modern scholarship has been on [the last Pagans'] supposedly stubborn resistance to Christianity. Rather surprisingly, they have been transformed from the arrogant, philistine land-grabbers most of them were into fearless champions of senatorial privilege, literature lovers, and aficionados of classical (especially Greek) culture as well as the traditional cults. The dismantling of this romantic myth
is one of the main goals of this book."

 

 

 

After plowing through this dense and scholarly tome by Alan Cameron, I may have now changed my opinion about the relationship among the fourth century Christian and Pagan communities. Cameron may have successfully dismantled the romantic mythology of Pagans being the last bastion of enlightened ancient culture fending classical civilization against the darkness and
ignorance of Christianity.

Here are two good reviews of the book:

http://www.unrv.com/book-review/last-pagans-rome.php

 

 

 

Quote

The last pagans in Rome were busy administrators who happened not to be Christian. Most of the Christians with whom they dealt likewise did not see the issues of the day purely in terms of who worshipped what. This was after all a time when the Roman empire was undergoing huge changes, with invading armies sweeping across the provinces and economic collapse a stark reality.
While there were fanatics - mainly on the Christian side - for most aristocratic Romans religious belief was simply not the deciding factor in the issues of the day. However, conversion was a convenient option in an ever more Christian empire, and Rome's last pagans eventually succumbed - with hardly a whimper.

 

 

http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/417316.article

Eugenius' power grab might need to be assessed with this alternative (and thoroughly researched and convincingly argued) background in mind. Eugenius might not have been the last great "hero of the Pagans" once imagined by Pagan romantics and apologists.

This is one case where the numismatists may have drawn the incorrect conclusions from the evidence.



guy also known as gaius

 

 

Edited by guy
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Just because Eugenius may not have been a romantic hero, doesn't mean that he wasn't pagan (or close to pagans) either.

I don't see this coin as giving the wrong evidence: Eugenius' beard may indeed be a symbol of his paganism.

Being a romantic champion of paganism doesn't equal favouring paganism! Hence disproving the first doesn't disprove the latter.

 

Anyway, I believe that Cameron exaggerates: the picture where basically nobody cared about religion is just as bad as the rendering of the last pagans as romantic heroes. I wonder if Cameron speaks of Late Antiquity or modern Europe.

Edited by Number Six
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