Background Image
Table of Contents Table of Contents
Previous Page  28 / 184 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 28 / 184 Next Page
Page Background

1064

Attica, Athens. Silver Tetradrachm (16.93 g), ca. 165-42 BC. 133/2 BC. Polych(armos), Nicog…, and

Themistokles, magistrates. Head of Athena right, wearing triple crested Attic helmet decorated with

Pegasos springing right. Rev. A-

QE

, owl standing right, head facing, on overturned amphora; across field,

magistrates’ names: HPA, API-

S

TO

F

, and

EPISTR

; to left, winged caduceus; Z on amphora, ME below;

all within laurel wreath. (Thompson 379e-i). Extremely fine.

$ 1,000

1065

Attica, Athens. Silver Tetradrachm (16.83 g), ca. 165-42 BC. 136/5 BC. Hera(kles), Aristoph…, and

Epistr(atos), magistrates. Head of Athena right, wearing triple crested Attic helmet decorated with Pegasos

springing right. Rev. A-

QE

, owl standing right, head facing, on overturned amphora; across field, magistrates’

names: HPA, API-

S

TO

F

, and

EPISTR

; to left, club draped with lion’s skin and set over bow in bow-case;

L

on amphora,

GL

below; all within laurel wreath. (Thompson 339c-e). Extremely fine.

$ 1,000

1066

Attica, Athens. Silver Tetradrachm (16.71 g), ca. 165-42 BC. New Style issue. 136/5 BC. Hera(kles),

Aristoph…, and Polych(armos), magistrates. Head of Athena right, wearing triple crested Attic helmet

decorated with Pegasos springing right. Rev. A-

QE

, owl standing right, head facing, on overturned amphora;

across field, magistrates’ names: HPA, API-

S

TO

F

, and

P

O

L

Y[X]; to left, club draped with lion’s skin and

set over bow in bow-case; E on amphora, HP below; all within laurel wreath. (cf. Thompson 330-2). NGC

grade AU; Strike: 5/5, Surface: 3/5.

$ 1,000

1067

Islands off Attica, Aegina. Silver Stater (12.10 g), ca. 480-457 BC. Sea turtle, head turned to left in profile,

with pelleted-T design on shell. Rev. Large incuse square with skew pattern composed of five sunken

compartments. (Meadows grp. Iiia; Milbank pl. I, 14-5; SNG Delepierre 1522; Dewing 1674). Well struck in

high relief and toned. Choice very fine.

$ 1,250

One ancient tradition held that king Pheidon of Argos was the first Greek ruler to strike coins on Aegina, presumably because the

island city was already a maritime trading powerhouse even before coined money was introduced to Greece proper. The coinage of

Aegina became a tool for the island’s international trade and its types became so well recognized that the coins were frequently just

referred to as “turtles.” Although Aegina was conquered by Athens in 456 BC and its inhabitants expelled on the eve of the of the

Peloponnesian War in 431, thereby ending production of the turtles, the Aeginetic weight standard of ca. 12.1 g to the didrachm

stater lived on as the preferred standard for many civic coinages of the Peloponnesos and Northern Greece. Try as they might, even

the Athenians could not fully erase the old influence of Aegina.

1064

1066

1065

1067