Roman bronze reverses: Gloria Exercitus to Salus Reipublicae
The seven late-Roman reverse types that resolve a worn small bronze. Two soldiers, falling horseman, wolf and twins, Victory walking — match and date.
On a worn late-Roman bronze the bust is usually a generic diademed silhouette — the reverse type is what actually attributes the coin. Six or seven reverse motifs account for the overwhelming majority of UK detector finds. Once you can recognise them at a glance, you can put a date range on a coin before reading a single letter of the legend.
Why the reverse dominates late-Roman attribution
Late-Roman emperors stopped commissioning individual portrait dies. The diademed bust on a Constantinian nummus is a generic Roman emperor — you need the legend to know which one. The reverse, by contrast, refers to a specific imperial slogan or event, and those slogans were rotated in tight chronological cycles. Even a coin where the obverse legend is gone usually has enough reverse survival to attribute to a single Reece period.
The Constantinian reverses (330–348)
GLORIA EXERCITVS — two standards (330–337)
The original GLORIA EXERCITVS (“glory of the army”) type, introduced around 330. Two soldiers, helmeted and cuirassed, hold their shields and reversed spears outwards; between them stand two legionary standards on staffs. Module ~16–18 mm, AE3 fabric. Mint mark in the exergue (below the figures) — UK finds skew Trier (TRP / STR), London (PLON) and Arles (SCONST for Constantina = Arles after 328).
GLORIA EXERCITVS — one standard (337–348)
After Constantine I died in 337, the type was simplified to a single standard between the two soldiers. Module drops to ~14–16 mm and the strike quality deteriorates as the period progresses.

VRBS ROMA — wolf and twins (330–340)
VRBS ROMA (“the city of Rome”) is a commemorative celebrating the foundation myth. The obverse shows the city personification — a helmeted, left-facing bust of Roma, not an emperor — with the legend VRBS ROMA. The reverse is the unmistakeable she-wolf nursing Romulus and Remus, with two stars above. Constantinople got its own version (CONSTANTINOPOLIS, with a Victory on a prow reverse) struck in parallel.
CONSTANTINOPOLIS — Victory on prow (330–340)
The CONSTANTINOPOLIS commemorative pairs with VRBS ROMA. The obverse shows a helmeted Constantinopolis (the city personified) and the reverse a Victory on the prow of a ship, holding a sceptre — a deliberate echo of the early-imperial Republican “Victory on prow” reverses of Augustus. Module and date match the VRBS ROMA series.
The post-Constantinian reverses (348–361)
FEL TEMP REPARATIO — falling horseman
FEL TEMP REPARATIO (“the restoration of happy times”) was a long-running slogan but the “falling horseman” sub-type is the dominant variety from 348 onwards. Issued under Constantius II and Constans I in particular. Module starts around 23 mm (AE2) and shrinks through copies and barbarous imitations down to ~14–16 mm. Barbarous “FEL TEMP” imitations are extremely common UK finds — struck locally by unofficial mints to meet currency demand.
Other FEL TEMP REPARATIO sub-types include the Phoenix on a globe, the emperor with a captive, and a galley with the emperor and Victory aboard. The falling-horseman is by some margin the commonest.

Late-4th-century reverses (364–395)
| Reverse legend | Image | Period | Emperors |
|---|---|---|---|
| GLORIA ROMANORVM | Emperor dragging a captive (or standing with labarum) | RP 19, 364–378 | Valentinian I, Valens, Gratian |
| SECVRITAS REIPVBLICAE | Victory walking left holding wreath and palm | RP 19, 364–378 | Valens commonly |
| REPARATIO REIPVB | Emperor with kneeling captive | RP 20, 378–388 | Theodosius I, Gratian |
| VICTORIA AVGGG | Two Victories holding wreath | RP 21, 388–402 | Theodosius I, Honorius, Arcadius |
| SALVS REIPVBLICAE | Victory dragging a captive | RP 21, 388–402 | Theodosius I, Arcadius, Honorius |
How to read a reverse on a worn coin
- Count the figures.Two standing figures with something between them → GLORIA EXERCITVS. One figure standing → Victory / Securitas / Salus type. Figure with captive → GLORIA ROMANORVM or SALVS REIPVBLICAE. Falling horse and rider → FEL TEMP REPARATIO.
- Count the standards.Two standards = early GLORIA EXERCITVS (330–337). One standard = late GLORIA EXERCITVS (337–348). No standards (two figures with shields) = something else entirely.
- Look for the wolf and twins. Categorical VRBS ROMA.
- Look for the ship’s prow. Categorical CONSTANTINOPOLIS.
- Read any surviving legend. Two or three letters of
GLORIA,FEL TEMP,SECVRITASare usually enough to confirm. - Read the mintmark in the exergue. Together with the reverse type this gives a precise attribution even when the emperor name is gone.
Try DetectID on a real find
Upload a photo, add anything you measured, and we’ll return a calibrated shortlist with period, denomination, ruler and reasoning chain — the same diagnostic logic the guide above is built on.
Identify a find