Numismatica Ars Classica Zurich

Auction 154  –  19 May 2025

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Numismatica Ars Classica Zurich, Auction 154

Greek, Roman and Byzantine Coins

Mo, 19.05.2025, from 2:00 PM CEST
Pre bids are accepted until:
Mo, 19.05.2025, until 8:00 AM CEST
All lots marked with an asterisk (*) in this catalogue are most likely exempt from any US import tariffs, as they have been exported from the United States within the last 3 years and should be able to be returned under HTSUS subheading 9801.00.10. We have consulted a leading U.S. law firm specialised in International Trade who confirmed that in principle this is possible, but highlighting the lack of rulings in the specific context of ancient coins sold at auction. Hopefully, we will have some clarity by the time of the auction. Should you have any questions in the meantime, please do not hesitate to contact one of our offices.

Description

Greek Coins Sicily, Leontini

Tetradrachm circa 450-440, AR 27 mm, 17.15 g. Laureate head of Apollo r. Rev. ΛE – O – NT – IN – ON Head of a lion with open jaws r., around, four barley grains. Boehringer, Leontinoi 35 (these dies). Rizzo pl. XXIII, 2 (this obverse die). SNG ANS 221 (this obverse die).
A portrait of fine style struck in high relief on a very fresh metal and with a delicate old cabinet tone. Virtually as struck and almost Fdc

Ex Vinchon sale 1985, Trampitsch, 66.
Leontini was a Chalkidian Greek colony established by Sicilian Naxos in the late eighth century BC. It gained notoriety in c. 608 BC as the first city in Sicily to have its constitution subverted by a tyrant-in this case by a local strong man named Panaitios. The great success enjoyed by Panaitios of Naxos inspired other Sicilian Greeks to establish tyrannies in their own cities, setting a pattern for governance on the island that lasted into the third century BC. Leontinoi suffered the ill-effects of tyrannies through most of the fifth and fourth centuries BC. In c. 496/5 BC, the city was conquered by Hippokrates, the tyrant of Gela. A few decades later, it was subject to Hieron I, the tyrant of Syracuse, and compelled to accept the populations of Katane and Naxos after he expelled them in 476 BC. Only after his death in 466 BC were the Leontines able to restore the Katanaians and Naxians to their homes and recover their own freedom. This wonderfully preserved tetradrachm of Leontini is struck in very high relief and may very well be the finest example in private hands. It was produced in a period of relative peace between the overthrow of the Deinomenid dynasty of tyrants at Syracuse (465 BC) and the assumption of the Syracusan tyranny by Dionysios I in 405 BC. The obverse features a head of the god Apollo that is so beautiful and delicate that it approaches the feminine. If one did not know that the deity in question was Apollo (his identity is given away by the large laurel wreath on his head), the patron of both Chalkidians and colonial foundations, one might almost mistake the head for that of a water nymph with hair falling in what look like wet strands down the side of the head and neck. The reverse type features a dramatic lions head as a punning badge of the city. The Greek word for lion was leon. The four barleycorns that surround the head allude to the richness of Leontinis agricultural territory, but their arrangement reflects the influence of contemporary tetradrachms of Syracuse which depict the head of Aretusa encircled by four dolphins.

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