2 00 ROMAN MINOR SETTLEMENTS, ETC. 



MAXIMIANVS. Rev. GENIO POPVLI ROMANI. The 

 genius of Rome standing S.F. in field. In exergue 

 P.T.R. A second example with same reverse, except 

 that S.C. are the letters in the field. A third example 

 with the reverse identical. 



CONSTANTINE (The Great). Rev. SOLI INVICTO 

 COMITI. The sun god standing. In the field T.F. 

 Nine coins had this reverse. 



CONSTANTINE (The Great). Rev. S.P.Q.R. OPTIMO 

 PRINCIPI. Three standards. In exergue MO.S.T. 



LICINIVS. Rev. GENIO POPVLI ROMANI. Genius of 

 Rome standing. 



CONSTANTINVS II. (As Caesar.) Same reverse as last 

 named coin. 



Mr. Reynolds also describes four which were part 

 of the same find, but not in his possession. 



DIOCLETIAN. Rev. GENIO POPVLI ROMANI. Genius 

 of Rome standing. 



CONSTANTINE (The Great). Rev. MARTI PATRI. 

 PROPVG. Mars in the attitude of combating. In 

 exergue PLN. 



A coin said to bear on Obv. DIVO CONSTAN- 

 TINO PIO. Rev. An altar with an eagle sitting at 

 the foot on each side, with expanded wings and 

 legend, MEMORIA FELIX. For CONSTANTINO 

 the reading should probably be CONSTANTIO. 



CONSTANTINVS II. (As Ceesar.) Rev. GENIO POPVLI 

 ROMANI (as above). In exergue PTR. 

 Mr. Reynolds also briefly describes 28 more coins of the 



same " find," and of the same types. 



According to the Annual Register for 1778, p. 170, the 



weight of these coins was exactly cjlbs. 



The fourth discovery at Crich was made on the 9th of 



January, 1788, and in a letter from the Rev. John Mason 



(Curate of Crich), in vol. x. of the Archtzologia, p. 31, is thus 



alluded to — "As some labourers were getting stone upon Edge 



