| Εκδότης |
Syracuse
(Sicily) |
|---|---|
| Τύραννος |
Γέλων Α' (Γέλων) (485 π.Χ. - 478 π.Χ.)
|
| Τύπος | Απλά νομίσματα κυκλοφορίας |
| Έτος | 485 π.Χ. |
| Αξία | Tetradrachm (20) |
| Συνάλλαγμα | Litra |
| Σύσταση | Άργυρος |
| Βάρος | 16,99 g |
| Διάμετρος | 23 mm |
| Σχήμα | Κυκλικό (ανώμαλο) |
| Τεχνική | Σφυρηλατημένο, Εγκοιλωμένο/εσκαμμένο |
| Διάταξη | Διάταξη μεταλλίου ↑↑ |
| Απονομιμοποιημένο | Ναι |
| Αριθμός | N# 407717 |
(en) Head of the river god Alpheios facing, with a moustache, long beard, small horns (their tips off the flan) and non-human ears.
(en) Two large grains of barley; all within a deep incuse square.
Γραφή: ελληνική
Επιγραφή ΣVRA
C. Arnold-Biucchi, and A.-P. C. Weiss, “The River God Alpheios on the First Tetradrachm Issue of Gelon at Syracuse,” QT XXXVI (2007), pp. 59-74, pl. I, 1-1a.
Unique.
From CNG :
This coin was the subject of an important article by Arnold-Biucchi and Weiss (cited above) in which they concluded that the river god had to be Alpheios: the river god from Epirus who dived into the sea to follow Arethusa to the spring on the island of Ortygia, where Syracuse was founded. They also pointed out that epigraphically and stylistically the coin must have been issued after Boehringer’s Group I, Series II had ended, since all of those coins had four letter inscriptions using three-bar sigmas (ϟVRΑ). This piece has a four letter inscription as well, but with the more ‘modern’ four-bar sigma (ΣVRΑ); however, this only appeared on a single die, V 25, which was used for all of the small group of coins that make up B. Group II, series 3 (B. 34-37). There, however, it was partnered with the complete city name on the reverse (Group II, series 3); beginning with Group II, series 4 the four letter inscription disappears, with only the full name on the reverse. Thus our coin, with only a single inscription, must come before Group II, 3.
This internal chronology enables us to show that this coin must have been struck c. 485 when Gelon, the powerful tyrant of Gela, captured Syracuse. The head of Alpheios is very close to the head of the river god Gelas who appears on Gela’s issues and it would seem that Gelon wanted to mark his control over Syracuse by a spectacular coinage that was completely different from what had been struck before. Clearly, the Syracusans did not approve and must have insisted on a coinage that more clearly reflected the status of their own powerful city. Thus the change to a revised version of their traditional tetradrachm coinage.
Παρακαλούμε συνδέσου ή δημιούργησε έναν λογαριασμό για να διαχειριστείς τη συλλογή σου.
| Χρονολογία | VG | F | VF | XF | AU | UNC | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Απροσδιόριστη | |||||||||||||||
| Χ.Χ. (-485) |
|
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Κανένα μέλος δεν επιθυμεί να ανταλλάξει αυτό το νόμισμα προς το παρόν.
| Εικόνες | Πώληση | Χρονολογία | Βαθμός | Τιμή πώλησης | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
CNG Triton XV Λοτ 1003
|
3 Ιαν 2012 | XF |
USD 700.000,00
(+ προμήθεια αγοραστή) |
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| © Classical Numismatic Group, Inc. | |||||