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v49_0038 - BRUTTIUM - REGGIO Hexas, (PBQ, Æ 13)

BRUTTIUM - REGGIO Hexas, (PBQ, Æ 13) AU
MONNAIES 49 (2011)
Starting price : 145.00 €
Estimate : 250.00 €
unsold lot
Type : Hexas, (PBQ, Æ 13)
Date: c. 415/410 - 387 AC.
Mint name / Town : Bruttium, Rhégium
Metal : bronze
Diameter : 12,5 mm
Orientation dies : 9 h.
Weight : 1,85 g.
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire de qualité exceptionnelle pour ce type sur un petit flan ovale, parfaitement centré des deux deux côtés. Très beau masque de lion. Tête archaïsante d’Apollon au revers élégante et de haut relief. Magnifique patine vert olive foncé
Predigree :
Cet exemplaire provient du stock CGB (1990)

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Masque de lion vu de face ; grènetis circulaire.

Reverse


Reverse description : Tête laurée d’Apollon à droite, les cheveux relevés et retenus par un bandeau.
Reverse legend : RHGINON
Reverse translation : (de Rhegium).

Commentary


Notons la forme particulière de l’ethnique au revers avec un omicron au lieu d’un oméga. Ce type appartient au groupe XI du classement de Rutter.

Historical background


BRUTTIUM - REGGIO

(415-387 BC)

Rhegium (Rhegion), the last city of the Italian boot on the continent, located on the Strait of Messina opposite Sicily, was founded around 720 BC by Chalcidian settlers. Anaxilas, tyrant of Rhegium, welcomed many Greeks from Asia Minor who fled the Persian danger in 494 BC. With the help of his new colonists, he conquered Zancle which was renamed Messina, occupied by many Messenians. Anaxilas won a victory at the Olympics of 480 BC and introduced a mule bege on the coinage of Rhegium and Messina before extending it to most of Sicily. The tyrant's son was driven out in 476 BC. Democracy was established in 461 BC and this date marks the beginning of coinage with the founding hero of the city, Iokaste. The city was destroyed in 387 BC by Dionysius of Syracuse. Rhegium was nevertheless rebuilt by Dionysius the Younger around 356-350 BC. The Romans captured the city in 271 BC, but were quickly expelled. After 203 BC and the end of the Second Punic War, Rhegium fell definitively under Roman rule..

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