Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Uncia (coin)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The uncia (Latin; lit.β'twelfth part') was a Roman currency worth one twelfth of an as.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2015) |

Remove ads
Republican coin
By derivation, it was also the name of a bronze coin valued at 1β12 of an as made during the Roman Republic.[1] The uncia started as a Roman-Oscan weight of 22.75 grams for a 273-gram pound (libra), with Attic weight issues of about 27 grams under the libral standard for a 327 gram pound and was produced occasionally towards the beginning of Roman cast bronze coinage. Obverse types of the uncia include a knucklebone (c.β289β245 BC), a barleycorn (c.β280β245 BC), and the helmeted bust of Roma (from c.β240 BC).
Remove ads
Empire coin
In imperial times the uncia was briefly revived under Trajan (98β117) and Hadrian (117β138). This coin was about 11β14 mm (0.43β0.55 in) in diameter and weighed about 0.8β1.2 grams (0.028β0.042 oz). It featured the bust of the emperor on the obverse with no inscription and "SC" (for Senatu Consulto) in a wreath on the reverse. If this issue belonged to the imperial system, meaning it was not a provincial piece, it would be an uncia. This issue may have been made only for circulation in the East.[citation needed]
Remove ads
See also
Notes
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads