1091
Ionia, Klazomenai. Silver Drachm (6.59 g), ca. 498-494 BC. Forepart of winged boar right. Rev. Quadripartite
incuse square. (Rosen 563; Jameson 1492; Asyut 615; Traité II 487; SNG Copenhagen 1-2). Toned. Choice
very fine.
$ 1,300
ex NFA MBS (18 October 1990), lot 310.
1092
Ionia, Klazomenai. Silver Drachm (6.77 g), ca. 498-494 BC. Forepart of winged boar right. Rev. Quadripartite
incuse square. (Rosen 563; Jameson 1492; Asyut 615; Traité II 487; SNG Copenhagen 1-2). Fine style. Nice
old tone. Very fine.
$ 500
ex NFA MBS (18 October 1990), lot 310.
Remarkable ElectrumHekte - ex Prospero and Hunt Collections
1093
Ionia, Phokaia. Electrum Hekte (2.53 g), ca. 478-387 BC. Bearded head of Silenos facing, wreathed with
ivy; in left field, small seal upward. Rev. Quadripartite incuse square. (Bodenstedt 67 (dies a/
a
; this coin),
otherwise unpublished in the major collections).
Very rare.
Small scrape on the obverse at one o’clock,
excellent style. Choice very fine.
$ 3,250
ex Prospero Collection (The New York Sale XXVII, Baldwin / Markov / M&M, 4 January 2012), lot 521
ex Nelson Bunker Hunt Collection, pt. II (Sotheby’s, New York, 21-22 June 1990), lot 502
ex NFA V (23-24 February 1978), lot 158
ex Kastner 4 (27 November 1973), lot 125.
Silenos was the companion and tutor of the Greek wine-god Dionysos. He was known for having the ears and tail of a horse, and
for his prodigious consumption of wine. While intoxicated - virtually his natural state according to the Greek mythographers - he
possessed special wisdom and the power of prophecy. It was said that he once advised King Midas of Phrygia that “the best thing for
a man is not to be born, and if already born, to die as soon as possible.” Perhaps, then, it should come as no shock that Silenos was
driven to excessive drink; after all, he was one who always found his glass half empty.
1091
1092