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v24_0017 - BRUTTIUM - LOCRI Drachme, (MB, Æ 27)

BRUTTIUM - LOCRI Drachme, (MB, Æ 27) AU
MONNAIES 24 (2005)
Starting price : 275.00 €
Estimate : 450.00 €
Realised price : 275.00 €
Number of bids : 1
Maximum bid : 275.00 €
Type : Drachme, (MB, Æ 27)
Date: c. 300-280 AC.
Mint name / Town : Locres
Metal : bronze
Diameter : 26,5 mm
Orientation dies : 3 h.
Weight : 14,31 g.
Rarity : R2
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire parfaitement centré des deux côtés. Portrait de toute beauté avec une élégante chevelure. Magnifique patine vert olive foncé. Revers bien venu à la frappe sur un flan légèrement concave et décentré
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Tête laurée de Zeus à droite.

Reverse


Reverse description : Aigle, les ailes déployées debout à gauche sur un foudre ; devant une corne d’abondance.
Reverse legend : LOKRON/ F.

Commentary


Mêmes coins que l’exemplaire de la collection de l’American Numismatic Society (ANS. 550).

Historical background


BRUTTIUM - LOCRI

(4th - 3rd century BC)

Lokroi Epizephyrioi (Locres) was founded in 690 BC by Locrian and Opontian settlers. The city, an ally of Syracuse, fell under the domination of Dionysius I in 388 BC. The city only regained its autonomy in 346 BC, when its coinage began. Its territory was one of the largest in Magna Graecia, and therefore vulnerable. The Locrians appealed to Alexander the Molossian, king of Epirus, to intervene in southern Italy against the Lucanian tribes and the Brettians. Alexander, installed in Locres, led several offensives before finding death in 330 BC in Pandosia. During the intervention of Pyrrhus, from 280 BC, in southern Italy at the behest of Taranto, Locri found itself to be the headquarters of the Epirote king. But after the king's departure in 277 BC, the Locrians entered the Roman alliance by helping drive out the Greek garrison. During the Second Punic War, Locri opened its doors to Hannibal in 216 BC after the disaster at Cannae and was one of the main supply ports for the Carthaginians. The city was finally taken by Scipio in 205 BC.

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