Very rare Geta bronze, practically not available in trade at all and missing from the largest collections of ancient coins.
Only coins from Cremna mint have the title Geta FOR, is probably an abbreviation of Fortis or Fortissimus, meaning strong, brave, the most powerful. On the reverse there is a Nemesis (goddess of vengeance, destiny and justice), holding a scepter, at her feet, on the left side, a griffin holding a paw on a wheel symbolizing the cyclical nature of human fate. The motif of a winged griffin with a paw on a wheel appears in Roman art in the 1st century (an example is a wall painting from the Fabia House in Pompeii and a Domitian coin minted in Alexandria).
Roman Provincial
Pisidia, Cremna, Geta (209–212), AE18, Cremna mint
Obverse: bare headed bust right
P SEP GETA FOR CAE
Reverse: Nemesis standing front, head to left, holding fold of drapery with her right hand and cubit-rule in her left
VLTRI COL CR
Diameter 18 mm, weight 3.72 g