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Philippus Arabs

AC15-0101
AC15-0101AC15-0101
ID Number: AC15-0101 Description: Philippus Arabs Country or State: Roman Empire (33rd Emperor of the Roman Empire) Year: 249 A.D. (Antiochia mint) Period: Crisis of the 3rd Century Head of State/Ruler: Philippus Arabs (Full Name; Marcus Julius Philippus (from bi ...Read more



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ID Number: AC15-0101
Description: Philippus Arabs
Country or State: Roman Empire (33rd Emperor of the Roman Empire)
Year: 249 A.D. (Antiochia mint)
Period: Crisis of the 3rd Century
Head of State/Ruler: Philippus Arabs (Full Name; Marcus Julius Philippus (from birth to accession); Caesar Marcus Julius Philippus Augustus (as emperor)), commonly known as Philip or Philippus Arabs
Reign: 244–249 He came from Syria, and rose to become a major figure in the empire. He achieved power after the death of Gordian III, quickly negotiating peace with the Sassanid Empire. During his reign, Rome celebrated its millennium.
Currency: AR Antoninianus
Obverse: Laureate Bust Right
Obverse Legend: IMP M IVL PHILIPPVS AVG
Reverse: Aequitas standing facing right and holding balance in right hand
Reverse Legend: AEQVITAS AVGG
Composition: Silver (Ag)
Diameter: ~23.0 mm (Irregular)
Weight: 4.3 grams
Catalog Number: RCV 9258; Coh. 1; RIC 240 (R) var.; RSC 1 var.

Philip or Philip the Arabian was Roman emperor from 244 to 249). He served under Gordian III against the Persians, instigated the assassination of the emperor, and concluded a peace with Persia. The millennium of Rome was celebrated by him with the splendor of secular games in the Circus Maximus. Philip sent Decius to the Danube to quell a mutiny, but when the troops hailed Decius as emperor, he marched at their head upon Italy. Philip met them near Verona and was slain.

Philip the Arab seems to have been born sometime during the reign of Septimius Severus. He was born in the Roman province of Arabia, in what today is the village of Shahba, roughly 55 miles south-southeast of Damascus. The village was obscure at the time of Philip's birth, though once he became emperor, Philip renamed the community Philippopolis and embarked on a major building campaign. Little is known of Philip's father, save the name Julius Marinus. This name, however, indicates that the family held Roman citizenship and must have been locally prominent. Nothing is known of Philip's mother. At some point, probably in the 230s, Philip married Marcia Otacilia Severa. A son was born by 238 and named Marcus Julius Severus Philippus. Philip's early career is also obscure, though it was undoubtedly helped by that of his brother, Julius Priscus. Priscus was appointed praetorian prefect by Gordian III and had previously served as prefect of the Roman province of Mesopotamia. If a fragmentary inscription from Rome can be connected to Priscus, Philip's brother rose quickly during Gordian III's reign through a variety of equestrian offices, including procurator of Macedonia, vice prefect of Egypt, and judge at Alexandria.

Priscus' appointment as praetorian prefect probably came at the beginning of the Roman campaign to reconquer upper Mesopotamia in the spring of 242. The success of the campaign must have reflected well on Priscus, and when his colleague Timesitheus (who was also Gordian III's father-in-law) died the following year, Priscus' brother Philip joined him as praetorian prefect. The brothers remained the young emperor's most powerful deputies during the disastrous campaign against the Persians in the winter of 243-44. On the retreat back up the Euphrates after the Roman defeat at Misikhe, Gordian was killed sometime during the winter months of 244. Most sources state that Philip was involved in Gordian's death; some claim that Philip engineered a mutiny by diverting the grain that was supposed to feed Gordian's troops.