Numismatica Ars Classica Zurich

Auction 124  –  23 June 2021

Numismatica Ars Classica Zurich, Auction 124

A Collection of Greek Coins of a Man in Love with Art, Part III

We, 23.06.2021, from 3:00 PM CEST
The auction is closed.

Description

Lucania, Heraclea.   Nomos circa 390-340, AR 7.85 g. Head of Athena facing three-quarters r., wearing triple-crested Attic helmet. Rev. ΗΠΑΚΛΗΙ - ΩΝ Heracles standing r., fighting the Nemean lion, about to strike with his club. BMC 27 (this coin). Work 23a (this coin). SNG Lloyd 270 (these dies). SNG ANS 56 (these dies). Van Keuren 22. Historia Numorum Italy 1375.
Extremely rare and in an unusually good condition for this difficult issue. A superb portrait of
fine style, work of a very skilled master engraver. A lovely old cabinet
tone, minor marks, otherwise good very fine

Ex Leu 20, 1978, 8; Sotheby's 21-22 June 1990, Hunt, 188 and New York XXVII, 2012, Prospero, 45 sales. From the duplicates of the British Museum.
The types of this nomos reflect the cultural and artistic influences on Tarentum in the early fourth century BC. The obverse type is a superbly rendered three-quarter facing head of Athena wearing a triple-crested helmet. It is almost certainly derived from the famous image of the goddess engraved by Euainetos for Syracusan tetradrachms in the period 405-400 BC. This Syracusan type, along with the three-quarter facing head of Arethusa engraved by Kimon, was extremely popular and exerted a great influence on the development of coin types throughout the Mediterranean in the fourth century BC. The reverse depicts Heracles slaying the Nemean lion as the first of his Twelve Labors. It appears here as an indicator of the ethnic origins of the Tarentines. Tarentum was arguably the greatest of the few colonies sent out from the Dorian Greek city of Sparta. Like all Dorians, the Spartans claimed to be the descendants of the sons of Heracles who returned to the Peloponnesus to reclaim their lands after a period of exile. Indeed, the dual kings of Sparta were said to be direct heirs of Heracles through Eurysthenes and Procles. As Tarentum was founded in 708 BC by members of the disenfranchised Parthenian class of Sparta, the Tarentines could also claim Heraclid descent.

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Price realized 26'000 CHF
Starting price 8'000 CHF
Estimate 10'000 CHF
The auction is closed.
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