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Di Nomos

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Posts posted by Di Nomos

  1. Echo the thoughts of everyone else. Best wishes on a speedy recovery. Take it easy and when you get home, play with your coins - coins always make things better!

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  2. My only hope for the letter B.

    Bearded male head on the obverse and facing head of Bes on the reverse. Drachm from Philistia, Gaza. Mid 5th century BC to 333 BC.

    Bes was an Egyptian deity of childbirth amongst other things. Would also have a severe headache with that test cut through his head!

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  3. Excellent coins on show. My example is a tetradrachm from Selinus in Sicily, c. 430 - 420 BC. 26mm, 17.32g. (Have shown this coin a few times before).

    Obv: Chariot driven right by Artemis, Apollo beside her drawing bow, barley grain below.

    Rev: River god Selinus holding phiale over lit altar, cradling palm branch in left arm. Before altar, rooster standing left, to right selinon leaf above bull standing on basis.

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  4. I have a couple of facing heads. Spent a lot of time debating before purchasing these coins, as I'm a bit fussy!

    First coin Apollo on a drachm from Amphipolis in Macedon, c. 370 BC. I particularly like the coins of Amphipolis, especially the tetradrachms, but they are very pricey. This drachm was a bit more affordable, and still nice style. 

    Second a stater from Larissa in Thessaly, c. 340 BC. A popular type amongst collectors of Ancient Greek coins. Took a while to find one I really liked and was affordable, but happy with this. 

    AmphipolisDrachm.png.0a3ebd035d016f846e32548acc38b1f0.png

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  5. I only have one coin related to Alexander. A tetradrachm minted in Alexandria under Ptolemy1, c. 315 BC, with a portrait of the deified Alexander wearing an elephant skin headress.

    What makes this coin somewhat rarer, is that it is minted on the Attic weight standard (17g), whereas most with the Nike reverse were minted on a lower weight standard (around 15g). The first issues with the Zeus reverse were minted on the Attic weight. So I guess this was minted right at the beginning of the new reverse design, but before the weight was decreased.

    Anyway, great write up Ryro. Interesting and entertaining as usual!

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  6. I've shown this a few times before. Tetradrachm from the foundation of Rhodes the city, 408/7 - 404 BC. 

    I purchased this from a CNG auction around 10 years ago. Wanted a coin from Rhodes, and liked the sphinx on the reverse. The surface is quite granular, though seems worse in the photo than it actually is.

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  7. I don't usually start threads, but as I won't be purchasing many coins this year, I  thought I'd take the opportunity to show something new. I only have a compact collection of ancient Greek coins, and thought it would be remiss not to have at least one bronze.

    I first saw this type in a NAC auction last year, and was staggered when it sold for 14,000 CHF, as beautiful as it was. That coin (and this) have the same artist's signature, and to be honest, I didn't realise the great Syracusan artist's signed bronze coin dies.

    This is a hemilitron, c. 410 - 405 BC. 16mm, 3.57g. Arethusa on the obverse with a grain ear (partially on flan) behind. Reverse has wheel with four spokes, ethnic SYRA in top quarters, two dolphins below in bottom quarters.

    On Aethusa's ampyx is the initial EY. Looking at others of the type, some say it's Eukleidas, others say Euainetos, but I'm pretty sure it's Eumenes. I have seen some tetradrachms with the same EY sig. attributed to him. The style also seems to be of his hand. But, it could be one of the others also.

    Anyway, I think it's a very attractive portrait, and I now have a bronze and a signed artist coin from Syracuse, all in one. And whilst it wasn't cheap necessarily, it was a small fraction of 14,000 CHF! In hand it is a slightly lighter green, but a very pretty colour.

    Thanks if you took the time to read or even just look at the picture, and feel free to post anything you like - bronze, Sicily, signed etc.

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