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74

bid online at

www.goldbergcoins.com

(800) 978-COIN (2646)

|

Ancient Coins

Enlargement

1677 Crete, Kydonia. Silver Diobol (1.44 g), early 2nd century BC

. Head of nymph left.

Reverse:

Linear quadripartite square with diagonal in

lower left penal and pellet in each of the others; above, pellet. Seager pl. IV, Ha-35; SNG Lockett 2549; Dewing 2002 (same obv. die).

Very Rare.

Struck from a rusted obverse die. Lightly toned.

Extremely Fine

.

Estimate Value ............................................................................................................................................................................ $250 - 350

From the Hanbery Collection; Purchased privately from F. Arnold in the 1980s.

"M

ILLER

T

IME

"

FOR

H

ERAKLES

S

ILVER

S

TATER

Enlargement

1678

Crete, Phaistos. Silver Stater (11.41 g), ca. 322-300 BC

.

AI

TI

N, Herakles seated left atop lion' s skin draped over rock, head fac-

ing, club resting against left; before him, tree upon which is hung his bow and quiver; behind, large amphora.

Reverse:

Bull butting right; all

within wreath. Svoronos 34 Pl. XXIV, 3

(same dies)

; Le Rider pl. XXII, 31.

Very Rare.

Lightly toned.

Choice Very Fine

.

Estimate Value .................................................................................................................................................................$2,500 - 3,000

The Hanbery Collection; Purchased privately from F. Kovacs in 1988.

While other coins of Phaistos depict Herakles at work, either preparing or in the act of battling the Lernaean Hydra, this stater shows him rest-

ing at the end of his many labors. He deserved the break. First Hera had driven him mad and caused him to kill his children, then, in order to

expiate his blood guilt he was compelled to serve Eurystheus, the king of Mycenae, and complete twelve impossible labors. These forced him to

travel from one end of the Greek world to the other, killing or bringing back monstrous beasts, picking apples, or stealing girdles. By any mea-

sure, Herakles had had a tough life - and he still had not reached the part of it where his wife unwittingly set him on fire with a poisoned shirt.

After all he had been through, it was time for a rest. Here the die-engraver thoughtfully shows him sitting back with his weapons and lion' s skin

hung up on a tree, ready to drink deeply from a large amphora behind him - "Miller time" for heroes.