In comparison to coins of the twenty-first century, this follis of Anastasius I (r. 491–518) is fairly large and hefty. On the obverse, a serrated circle surrounds the profile of the emperor. The top of his head divides the inscription (DNANASTA|SIVSPPAVG, meaning Our Lord, Anastasius, Eternal Augustus), visually signaling that his image is the most important aspect of the coin’s design (Grierson 1999, pp. 38–41). Anastasius wears a diadem, a type of crown that was initiated by Alexander the Great in the fourth century BCE, and continued by late Roman emperors beginning with Constantine I in the fourth century CE (Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. “Diadem”). Anastasius dons the consular costume: the trabea, a large piece of cloth generally ...