Moneta Gallery Coin Museum



Users 22,369
Photos 3,381
Comments 351
Views 16,201,276
Disk Space 346.4mb

SunMon TueWed ThuFri Sat
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Moneta 2452
Zantetsuken 293
Chinacash 170
stretrader99z 133
numismatist6 100

Rhodes.jpg
Caria Rhodes - Helio
Moneta

[ Greek ]
Metapontum.jpg
Metapontion - Lucani
Moneta

[ Greek ]
Copy_of_OWLBLACK.jpg
ATTICA ATHENS
stretrader99z

[ Greek ]
AthensTet.jpg
Athens Owl Tetradrac
Moneta

[ Greek ]
ptolemyrx.jpg
Egypt - Ptolemy II,
Moneta

[ Greek ]
Agina.jpg
Aigina Sea Turtle
Moneta

[ Greek ]
· more ·

 

« Previous image · Next image »

Egypt_Nektanebo_gold
EGYPT - Pharaonic Kingdom, Nektanebo II

« Previous image  · Slide Show · Next image »

Moneta



Registered: August 2005
Location: Arizona USA
Posts: 2,365
users gallery
EGYPT, Pharaonic Kingdom. Nektanebo II. 361-343 BC. AV Stater (17mm, 8.23 g, 12h). Horse prancing right / Hieroglyphic representation of “good gold”: pectoral necklace (nebew = “gold”) crossing horizontally over a windpipe and heart (nefer = “good”). FF-BD 2g (D1/R2 – this coin); SNG Berry 1459 (same obv. die); SNG Copenhagen 1 (same dies); ACGC 1064 (same dies); Adams III 2075 (same obv. die); Hunt I 106 (same obv. die); Zhuyuetang 121 (same dies). Near EF, lightly toned, a little off center on obverse.
One of the great (and very popular) rarities for ancient gold coinage collectors is the gold stater (or daric?) issued by the Egyptian Pharaoh Nektanebo II. The authors of the die study cited above could account for only 42 examples struck from 3 obverse and 3 reverse dies with 5 die combinations. They also listed 5 examples from the Mit Rahineh hoard (IGCH 1658) that they could not examine for their die study. The attribution to Nektanebo II is based primarily on circumstantial historical evidence and not the coins themselves, which do not bear any specific ethnic or monogram.
Nekht-har-hebi, or Nektanebo II as he was known to the Greeks, was the nephew of the Pharaoh Tachos (Djedhor). Placed in command of the Egyptian army in Syria during the Satrapal Revolt, he turned his troops against his own king, and uncle, and took Egypt by force. In 351-350 BC, he repelled a Persian invasion but was driven from his throne in 344-343 by a second assault. He then fled Egypt and found refuge in Ethiopia and retained control of Upper Egypt for another few years.
Nektanebo most likely would have issued his gold staters to pay the mercenaries in his army. What makes the coinage of Nektanebo stand out is the adoption of a purely Egyptian design. This is the only known ancient coinage to employ a hieroglyph – a purely Egyptian coin. Triton XXII, Lot: 396. Estimate $75000, NOT physically in the Moneta Museum.
· Date: December 31, 2018 · Views: 1,636 · Filesize: 53.7kb · Dimensions: 500 x 253 ·
Keywords: EGYPT Pharaonic Kingdom Nektanebo II

ANC_Phoenicia_Byblus-Azbaal.jpg
TanitCarthage.jpg
Cappadocia1.jpg
Rom_PontiusPilatus.jpg
Anc_Persia_Daric.jpg
Anc_Grk_Mysia_Kyzikos_Diobol.jpg
Egypt_CleopatraVII.jpg
Egypt_Nektanebo_gold.jpg
Phoenicia_Tyre_Owlegypt.jpg
Sass_Ardeshir-I_drachm.jpg
Apollonia_Pontika_Gorgon.jpg
Carth_Hannibal.jpg
db_file_img_167879_544x262.jpg
Phoenicia_TyreOwl.jpg
Phoenicia_Sidon.jpg
Judea1st_Revolt.jpg
Judea_WidowMite.jpg
Phoe_Tyre_Shek.jpg
NewImage.jpg
Aegis.jpg
Miletos.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.