Parthicus Posted December 12, 2024 · Member Posted December 12, 2024 Axumite Kingdom. AE 13. King Ioel (7th century CE). Bust of king right, Ge'ez legend behind and before spelling out Negus (king). Reverse: Large cross in middle; four letters in Ge'ez spelling out IOEL. Munro-Hay and Juel-Jensen 132. This coin: Purchased at Baltimore Whitman Numismatic Expo, November 2024. The kingdom of Axum (or Aksum) was located in what is now northern Ethiopia, along the western shores of the Red Sea, and was for centuries an important center of trade between eastern Africa, Arabia, and the Mediterranean world. The kingdom began during the first century CE and was originally polytheistic, apparently with gods similar to those of southern Arabia. However, King Ezana (c.320s-360s CE) converted to Christianity (around the same time as Constantine I in Rome), establishing Axum as one of the earliest Christian kingdoms. The kingdom remained relatively prosperous, and in the early 6th century even conquered the Himyarite Kingdom in what is now Yemen. However, their Yemeni territory was taken by the Sasanian Persian king Khusro I in the 570s, and the rise of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula and eastern Mediterranean further damaged their trading economy. Axumite coinage stops sometime in the later 7th century, and the kingdom finally fell around 960. Axumite coinage is found in gold, silver, and copper, generally fairly small diameter. The designs don't show much variety, with pre-Christian coins usually showing the king's portrait on both sides, while Christian issues usually show a cross on the reverse. Nonetheless, the portraits do have a certain charm to them, at least in my opinion. Inscriptions can be in either Greek or in the local language Ge'ez, as on this piece. Interestingly, some bronze issues were made with a tiny incuse bit of gold in the middle of the cross on the reverse. Please share your Axumite coins. 14 Quote
mcwyler Posted December 12, 2024 · Member Posted December 12, 2024 I've already shown this, but you can never see such beautifully struck coins too often! Axum. Hethasas. Early 7th Century-620. CU (0.98g, 15mm). Obv.: crowned facing bust, holding short cross; pellet to right of head. Rev.: cross within lozenge. Munro-Hay type 141 6 Quote
mcwyler Posted December 12, 2024 · Member Posted December 12, 2024 Last year an amazing collection of these coins was auctioned by Leu Here are a couple (NOT MY COINS sob) 8 Quote
Finn235 Posted December 12, 2024 · Member Posted December 12, 2024 I love Axumite coins for being, unapologetically, their own thing and not just imitating whatever coinage was around them. The gold inlay on some coins is an incredible novelty that makes them very distinctive. I got this AR unit of Aphilas (same type @mcwyler posted above) mixed in with a LRB lot - I've been terrified to attempt to clean it to see if the gold inlay is still intact under the dirt. 7 Quote
John Conduitt Posted December 12, 2024 · Supporter Posted December 12, 2024 (edited) Here's my solitary Axumite coin. Temp. Ebana, 430-460 Axum. Copper, 13mm, 0.71g. Crowned and draped bust right, holding cross-tipped scepter; cross to left. Greek cross pattée with central annulet; all within annulet (Munro-Hay Type 76). Edited December 12, 2024 by John Conduitt 6 1 Quote
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