Scarce AE3 of Aelia Eudoxia, wife of Arcadius (383-408 AD), Nicomedia, Roman Empire

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AEL EVDO[XIA AVG], diademed bust right, hand of god above / GLORIA ROMANORVM, Eudoxia enthroned facing, arms folded over breast; [manus Dei] above, cross to right; SMNA in exergue. 16mm, 2.17 g. Nicomedia mint, minted 401-403 AD. RIC X 80; LRBC 2450. 

Uncleaned.

Aelia Eudoxia (d. 404 CE) was a powerful empress of the Eastern Roman Empire, the wife of Emperor Arcadius (r. 395–408 CE), and one of the most influential women of her time. Of Frankish origin, she rose to prominence at the imperial court in Constantinople, where her political influence grew rapidly after her marriage to Arcadius in 395. Eudoxia became a dominant force at court, often overshadowing her husband and involving herself in both imperial politics and religious affairs.

She is best known for her bitter conflict with John Chrysostom, the outspoken Patriarch of Constantinople, whose criticisms of imperial extravagance and court corruption she took personally. Their feud led to John’s exile and eventual death, though it also caused unrest in the capital. Eudoxia died in 404 CE, possibly due to complications from a miscarriage. Her legacy is one of both ambition and controversy, representing the growing role of imperial women in late Roman statecraft.


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