Moneta's Temple and Gallery en-us Thu, 21 Nov 2024 09:01:16 -0800 PhotoPost Pro 7.0 60 Israel Liberation Medal - 1962 /showphoto.php?photo=2305&title=israel-liberation-medal1962&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=2305&amp;title=israel-liberation-medal1962&amp;cat=559"><img title="Israel-Liberation-Medal.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Israel-Liberation-Medal.jpg" alt="Israel-Liberation-Medal.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: These designs were issued in various sizes and metals (design Rothschild &amp; Lipman), this is probably the smallest and minted in silver. OB: Under a date palm is a woman holding up a baby and a man tending a plant &quot;Israel Liberated 1948&quot; in English and Hebrew around. RX: The reverse features a depiction of a bronze coin issued by the Roman Empire following the defeat of Judea in 70 AD, the legend around &quot;JUDEA CAPTIVE 70 CE.&quot; I rescued this magnificent silver medal from a local pawn shop, they were about to send it off for melting! More on this icon medal from Israel by Llewelyn Morgan: This is not a coin but a silver medal, issued in Israel in 1958. On one side it reproduces a Roman coin in its centre, a brass sestertius from AD 71-2 in the reign of the emperor Vespasian (there’s a good image of an original coin here), and in fact the image on the medal closely reflects the size, as well as the design, of the original coin. Depicted on the Roman coin are the emperor, on the left, leaning on a spear, cradling a short sword in his other hand, and with his foot on a defeated enemy’s helmet. On the right is a woman in mourning, her head in her hand, seated on something generally identified as a cuirass. The scene is dissected by a palm tree, and bracketed by the Latin words IUDAEA CAPTA, “Judaea having-been-captured.” Judaea, corresponding roughly to modern Israel, was in antiquity renowned for its palm trees (Pliny, Historia Naturalis 13.26), which could thus symbolize the country. (The SC in the exergue below stands for SENATUS CONSULTO, “by the decree of the Senate,” its import disputed, but perhaps indicating that the coin was “the official Roman coinage”, to be distinguished from local coinages in the provinces.)* This Roman coin, along with a large number of similar designs, celebrated the defeat of the First Jewish Revolt against Roman control of Judaea, which ended with Vespasian’s capture of Jerusalem in AD 70 and his destruction of the Second Temple. The loss of the Temple is marked by Jews as a key moment in their dispersal from their homeland. From the point of view of Vespasian, this was evidence of the military prowess with which he had defeated the enemies of Rome: there is an authentically Roman callousness in that image of a mourning woman, embodiment of the defeated people. Fully 8% of the coins minted by the Flavian emperors, Vespasian and his sons Titus and Domitian, addressed this campaign in Judaea, and the Arch of Titus in Rome, completed under Domitian in AD 81-2, depicts in two reliefs on its inner walls scenes from the Triumph celebrated by Vespasian and his elder son Titus in AD 71. On the south side we see the spoils from the capture of the Temple on display in the triumphal procession. (For another coin related, in a different way, to the destruction of the Temple, a gold aureus of Vespasian in the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, see here.) The modern Israeli medal frames the Roman coin in such a way as to express the opposite perspective. Chains around its edge draw out the consequences for the Jewish population of Judaea, enslaved or dispersed, and the Hebrew at the bottom reads (my informants tell me), “Judea went into exile.” The year 1958, when the medal was produced, was the tenth anniversary of the establishment of Israel. The other side of the medal is a powerful, subtle reversal of the symbolic language of the Roman coin appropriate to that anniversary. The same palm tree dissects the scene, and again divides a man and a woman. But the woman is standing this time, and the man crouched, and the woman holds up her baby, while the crouching man, her husband, plants an olive tree, symbol of the modern state of Israel. The new tree and the old tree bear the same relation to each other as Israel to ancient Judaea: Judea or New Judea was an option considered for the name of the new nation. But the baby and the olive sapling especially speak of a future denied the mourning woman on the Roman sestertius. Finally, the inscription, which uses Latin to answer the Latin of the Roman coin, ISRAEL LIBERATA, “Israel having-been-freed,” and in Hebrew reads “Ten years for the freedom of Israel”, followed by a date in the Jewish calendar corresponding to 1958. Moneta Sat, 20 Feb 2016 17:30:25 -0800 Israel Liberation Medal - 1962 /showphoto.php?photo=2304&title=israel-liberation-medal1962&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=2304&amp;title=israel-liberation-medal1962&amp;cat=559"><img title="Israel-Liberation-Medal_sm.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Israel-Liberation-Medal_sm.jpg" alt="Israel-Liberation-Medal_sm.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: These designs were issued in various sizes and metals, this is probably the smallest and minted in silver. OB: Under a date palm is a woman holding up a baby and a man tending a plant &quot;Israel Liberated 1948&quot; in English and Hebrew around. RX: The reverse features a depiction of a bronze coin issued by the Roman Empire following the defeat of Judea in 70 AD, the legend around &quot;JUDEA CAPTIVE 70 CE.&quot; Moneta Sat, 20 Feb 2016 17:29:34 -0800 Israel 25 Mils - 1949 /showphoto.php?photo=1816&title=israel-25-mils1949&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1816&amp;title=israel-25-mils1949&amp;cat=559"><img title="Isr25Mil1949.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Isr25Mil1949.jpg" alt="Isr25Mil1949.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: This is a bad example and an even worse photo. The first coin of the modern State of Israel is this type but with a 1948 date - they are scarce and expensive. I assume this is the common &quot;closed link&quot; variety. According to KM SCWC all three type/dates listed were issued on April 6, 1949. The Anglo-Palestine Bank Ltd., which prepared the first banknotes even before the State was declared, did not prepare coins. The first steps toward issuing coins were taken by the State itself after its establishment. It was done very quickly, after realizing that there was a shortage of British Mandate coins, which were then in circulation. Israel's government requested proposals for the design of a new coin series from the Israel Numismatics Society. Until those were ready, a coin with a value of 25 mil was issued. The term &quot;mil&quot; was carried over from the British Mandate. The first coin in the new series, a 50 pruta coin, was only entered into circulation on May 11, 1949. The minting year 5708 (1948) appears only on 25 mil coins which were minted in Jerusalem; those printed in Holon bear the minting year 5709 (1949). Date of issue: 6th of April, 1949 Complete metal composition: Aluminium (97%), Magnesium (3%) Contemporary written information on the exact location of the Mints is sketchy and contradictory. It is presumed that an initial unsuccessful batch of coins dated 5708/1948 was minted at a workshop in the Hakirya compound in Tel Aviv (the former German Templer colony of Sarona). The balance of 5708/1948-dated coins was minted at the Michsaf cutlery factory in Holon, a fact which is well documented. Michsaf also minted a large quantity of coins dated 5709/1949, probably the &quot;Open link&quot; variety. Several sources indicate that a sizeable number of coins were minted in Jerusalem, but no written documentation about the location and name of the Mint is available. Moneta Sat, 08 Feb 2014 20:11:35 -0800 Palestine Mandate 100 Mils 1935 /showphoto.php?photo=1423&title=palestine-mandate-100-mils-1935&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1423&amp;title=palestine-mandate-100-mils-1935&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales100_1935.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales100_1935.jpg" alt="Pales100_1935.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: Most numerous issue of the 100 Mils series in silver. British ruled Mandate - not a &quot;Palestinian&quot; country. Legends were written in Arabic, English, and Hebrew. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 17:19:32 -0800 Palestine Mandate 50 Mils 1942 /showphoto.php?photo=1422&title=palestine-mandate-50-mils-1942&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1422&amp;title=palestine-mandate-50-mils-1942&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales50_42.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales50_42.jpg" alt="Pales50_42.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: Silver containing issue of the British ruled Mandate. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 17:15:07 -0800 Palestine Mandate 20 Mils 1942 /showphoto.php?photo=1421&title=palestine-mandate-20-mils-1942&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1421&amp;title=palestine-mandate-20-mils-1942&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales20_42.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales20_42.jpg" alt="Pales20_42.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: The bronze war-time issue by the British Mandate. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 17:11:46 -0800 Palestine Mandate 20 Mils 1927 /showphoto.php?photo=1420&title=palestine-mandate-20-mils-1927&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1420&amp;title=palestine-mandate-20-mils-1927&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales20_27.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales20_27.jpg" alt="Pales20_27.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: First year of issue in C/N. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 17:09:23 -0800 Palestine Mandate 10 Mils 1942 /showphoto.php?photo=1419&title=palestine-mandate-10-mils-1942&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1419&amp;title=palestine-mandate-10-mils-1942&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales10_42.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales10_42.jpg" alt="Pales10_42.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: The war-time bronze issue of the British Mandate. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 17:07:10 -0800 Palestine Mandate 10 Mils 1939 /showphoto.php?photo=1418&title=palestine-mandate-10-mils-1939&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1418&amp;title=palestine-mandate-10-mils-1939&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales10_39.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales10_39.jpg" alt="Pales10_39.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: Another CN issue by the British ruled mandate. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 17:04:05 -0800 Palestine Mandate 10 Mils 1934 /showphoto.php?photo=1417&title=palestine-mandate-10-mils-1934&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1417&amp;title=palestine-mandate-10-mils-1934&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales10_34.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales10_34.jpg" alt="Pales10_34.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: British Rule issue of 1934 in copper-nickel. This was a low mintage year with only 500 K struck. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 17:00:23 -0800 Palestine Mandate 5 Mils 1942 /showphoto.php?photo=1416&title=palestine-mandate-5-mils-1942&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1416&amp;title=palestine-mandate-5-mils-1942&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales5_42.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales5_42.jpg" alt="Pales5_42.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: British Rule issue in bronze, a two-year type only, 1942 and 1944 (no 1943 issues except for 1 Mil on all denominations). Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 16:55:40 -0800 Palestine 5 Mils 1935 /showphoto.php?photo=1415&title=palestine-5-mils-1935&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1415&amp;title=palestine-5-mils-1935&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales5_35.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales5_35.jpg" alt="Pales5_35.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: British Rule - 1935 issue in CN. See 1942 for bronze type. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 16:51:00 -0800 Palestine Mandate 2 Mils /showphoto.php?photo=1414&title=palestine-mandate-2-mils&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1414&amp;title=palestine-mandate-2-mils&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales2_27.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales2_27.jpg" alt="Pales2_27.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: First year of issue. British Mandate rule. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 16:47:26 -0800 Palestine Mandate 1 Mil /showphoto.php?photo=1413&title=palestine-mandate-1-mil&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1413&amp;title=palestine-mandate-1-mil&amp;cat=559"><img title="Pales1_27.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Pales1_27.jpg" alt="Pales1_27.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: First year of issue for the Palestine Mandate under British rule. Inscriptions on the OBVERSE &quot;Palestine&quot; in Arabic, English and Hebrew. Moneta Sun, 22 Jan 2012 16:44:42 -0800 Israel 50 Sheqalim /showphoto.php?photo=1385&title=israel-50-sheqalim&cat=559 <a href="/showphoto.php?photo=1385&amp;title=israel-50-sheqalim&amp;cat=559"><img title="Israel50coin.jpg" border="0" src="data/559/thumbs/Israel50coin.jpg" alt="Israel50coin.jpg" /></a><br /><br />by: Moneta<br /><br />Description: This modern Israeli coin is a tribute to a larger module (size) inflation era emergency coin of Jerusalem. The ancient coin of unknown denomination (speculated to be a 1/4 shekel) was issued in the fourth year of the First Revolt (Sept 69 - Sept 70 A.D.). The legend is &quot;Ligullath Zion&quot; (deliverance of Zion), this being the last year of the rebellion that was soon to end in defeat. The central theme is a citron plant beween two bundles of twigs, the other side would have shown a large cup. Moneta Sat, 31 Dec 2011 20:53:10 -0800