Moneta Gallery Coin Museum



Users 22,369
Photos 3,381
Comments 351
Views 16,193,936
Disk Space 346.4mb

SunMon TueWed ThuFri Sat
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Moneta 2452
Zantetsuken 293
Chinacash 170
stretrader99z 133
numismatist6 100

Hannover_1860B_1T.jpg
Hannover 1860 1 Vere
numismatist6

[ Member Galleries ]
81PTOLEMAIC_KINGDOM.jpg
Ptolemy IV
stretrader99z

[ Member Galleries ]
Copy_of_SSPRO_STCH_JJLJRBLKBK.jpg
SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS AE
stretrader99z

[ Member Galleries ]
gord.jpg
GORDON III
stretrader99z

[ Member Galleries ]
81VF_Licinius_I_Follis_Jupiter_R4_BLK.jpg
LICINIUS I
stretrader99z

[ Member Galleries ]
81PtolemyviI.jpg
Ptolemy VI
stretrader99z

[ Member Galleries ]
· more ·

 

« Previous image · Next image »

db_file_img_167879_544x262
Phoenicia - Sidon Dishekel - 353 BC

« Previous image  · Slide Show · Next image »

Moneta



Registered: August 2005
Location: Arizona USA
Posts: 2,365
users gallery
Apologies, this image is from a Roma Numismatics auction (9/2017). It's of a coin of such scarcity and quality that I'll never be able to own one but I wish to show here the major Phoenician types. The following description is also from their site.
Phoenicia, Sidon AR Dishekel. `Abd`aštart (Straton) I, dated RY 13 = 353/2 BC. War galley under way to left over zig-zag waves; III- (date) above / King of Persia and charioteer in biga left, King of Sidon standing left behind, in Egyptian dress, holding cultic sceptre and votive vase; 'B (in Phoenician) above. E&E-S Group IV.2.1.m, 1339 (D31/R33); Betlyon 23; Rouvier -; HGC 10, 242; DCA 849. 25.55g, 27mm, 11h.
Good Extremely Fine. Exceptionally well detailed for the type. Ex Jean Elsen list 231, 2005, no. 104.
The dishekels of Sidon are not particularly rare. They are however nearly uniformly poorly struck, or heavily worn, or both. This coin satisfies the conditions of being both comparatively very well struck on both obverse and reverse, and has evidently seen very limited circulation indeed, evidenced by the preservation of fine detail on both sides. It is therefore an extreme rarity within the series on account of its superlative condition and level of detail, unmatched by any of the examples present on CoinArchives, and far superior to the Millennia Collection example which sold for US$30,000 in 2014.
This coin dates to the final year of the reign of Abdashtart I (or Straton, as he was known to the Greeks). One of his first acts as king was to reduce the weight of the dishekel by approximately 12%, while increasing its silver content from 72 to 99 per cent, primarily to safeguard confidence in the Sidonian currency which had in his father's reign become increasingly debased.
A complex figure, caught between East and West, Abdashtart was required to honour Sidon's allegiance to the Persian Great King on the one hand, yet found himself personally drawn towards Greek culture on the other. Yet, despite increasing discontent amongst the Sidonians at Persian overlordship of Phoenicia, Abdashtart initially displayed the outward appearance of being a loyal servant of Artaxerxes II.
Early on in his reign, Abdashtart was able to obtain a guarantee of safe passage for an Athenian embassy to Artaxerxes, for which favour the Athenians honoured him with a decree set in marble on the Acropolis, next to the Parthenon. Importantly, this decree granted favourable trading rights and exemptions from taxation in Athens to the Sidonians. Thanks to this decree he obtained for himself an image as a philhellene, an image he promoted further through lavish patronage of Greek artists and musicians he invited to his court from the cities of Ionia and the Peloponnese.
Following the redating of the reigns of the Sidonian kings by J. Elayi (An Updated Chronology of the Reigns of Phoenician Kings during the Persian Period), it is now understood that Abdashtart was responsible for leading the Sidonian revolt against Persian overlordship that occurred in 356 BC, and which was swiftly suppressed the following year. Though he was not deposed, he was forced to surrender unconditionally and all of Phoenicia was placed under the supervision of the Persian agent Mazaios, who was made satrap of Transeuphrates. Abdashtart's final years between 355 and 352 appear to have been difficult, and according to ancient sources it is likely he suffered a sudden and violent death.
View & Download:
Coinweek Ancient Coin Series - Phoenicians at this: [ link ]
· Date: September 1, 2017 · Views: 2,836 · Filesize: 44.8kb · Dimensions: 544 x 262 ·
Keywords: Phoenicia Sidon Dishekel 353 BC

« more
FR_LaFayette_QrtE_07pf.jpg
USA_MdlOfHonor_BU11P.jpg
USA_BaldEagle_1D_08P.jpg
FR_LaFayette_100F_87pf.jpg
FR_LaFayette_100F_87bu.jpg
Kaz_Tangun_500T_16.jpg
Kaz_Tangun_500T_16.jpg
Kaz_Tangun_500T_16.jpg
Kaz_Tangun_500T_16.jpg
SpaceB_Apollo11_Ken.jpg
db_file_img_167879_544x262.jpg
Phoenicia_TyreOwl.jpg
USA_Texas_50c1934.jpg
IT_50c_1920.jpg
Latvia_50Santimu2.jpg
Brit_wAfric_1S_1913.jpg
Brit_Wafric_1944.jpg
FR_5Francs_1795_HercGp.jpg
UK_Queen_Elizabeth_1794.jpg
UK_Isaac_Newton_1793.jpg
UK_Wikinson_IronMaster2.jpg
· more »


Photo Sharing Gallery by PhotoPost
Copyright © 2007 All Enthusiast, Inc.

No portion of this page, text, images or code, may be copied, reproduced, published or distributed in any medium without the expressed written permission of the copyright holder.