Vinum Hadrianum

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An ancient coin featuring a Kantharos, a two-handled cup commonly used in ancient Greece for drinking. It is a quadruncia, part of the aes grave series, dating back to approximately 280 BCE. The coin weighs 193.74 grams and is made of cast bronze .
A coin that shows Kantharos, a type of ancient Greek cup used for drinking. A coin in a quadruncia (aes grave).

Vinum Hadrianum (Greek: Adriakos, Adrianos) is a wine from Hadria or Hatria, currently known as Atri,[1][2] in Picenum on the Adriatic coast of central Italy.[3] Hadrianum was already ancient in fame and was known as one of the good wines of the Empire.[4]

Hadrianum achieved a good reputation in the 1st century AD.[5] Pliny rated Hadrianum as one of the good wines, along with Mamertine from Messina in Sicily, Praetutian from Ancona on the Adriatic, Rhaetic from Verona, Luna from Tuscany, and Genoa from Liguria.[1]

Hadrianum was also praised by two Greek Augustan poets, Antiphilos of Byzantium and Antipater of Thessaloniki. In the middle of the 1st century AD, Dioscorides mentioned Hadrianum as the a neighboring wine of the so-called Praetutianum.[6] In Diocletian's Edict on maximum prices, it was mentioned that a Picenum wine, where Hadrianum was produced, was considered the most expensive wine, followed by the wine from Tibur and Falernum.[7]

Augustus also mentioned that a good vintage wine produced in Hatria was called Hadrianum,[2] while Emperor Hadrian introduced Vinum Hadrianum as a medicated wine.[8]

The amphorae

See also

References

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