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v49_0008 - CALABRIA - TARAS Diobole

CALABRIA - TARAS Diobole AU
MONNAIES 49 (2011)
Starting price : 175.00 €
Estimate : 280.00 €
Realised price : 235.00 €
Number of bids : 2
Maximum bid : 300.00 €
Type : Diobole
Date: c. 380-325 AC.
Mint name / Town : Calabre, Tarente
Metal : silver
Diameter : 13 mm
Orientation dies : 9 h.
Weight : 1,03 g.
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire sur un petit flan ovale, bien centré des deux côtés. Très belle tête casquée d’Athéna à droite. Très joli revers de style fin et de haut relief. Magnifique patine gris métallique avec des reflets mordorés et de petites oxydations au droit et au revers
Predigree :
Cet exemplaire a été acquis chez Joubert (1990)

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Tête d'Athéna (Minerve) à droite, coiffée du casque attique à cimier orné d’un skylla (monstre marin).

Reverse


Reverse legend : K.
Reverse description : Héraklès (Hercule) debout à droite, étranglant le lion de Némée ; lettre entre les jambes d’Héraklès.

Commentary


Poids léger. Sur cet exemplaire, Hercule ne semble pas tenir de massue. Cette dernière ne se trouve pas non plus dans le champ. Même coin de revers que l’exemplaire de l’American Numismatic Society (ANS. 1382, pl. 37).

Historical background


CALABRIA - TARAS

(380-345 BC)

Architas, Strategus

From 380 BC, the destinies of Taranto found themselves in the hands of Archytas of Taranto (460-360 BC), Pythagorean philosopher, friend of Plato, mathematician, astronomer, politician and general who was placed seven times at the head of his city. It is given for the inventor of the screw, the pulley, the rattle and the kite. Horace dedicated an ode to him. The pan-Hellenic foundation of Thurium in 443 BC had given rise to a conflict which was to oppose Taranto to Athens for more than thirty years. The two rival cities had ended up founding Héraclée, nevertheless under Tarentine influence. The Tarentines ended up imposing themselves on the towns of Métaponte and Siris. Archytas, in the first half of the fourth century BC, became the strategist of the Italiote confederation whose capital was Heraclea and which included, in addition to Tarentum, Metaponto and Thurium, Crotona, Velia and Naples. This period of Tarentine hegemony ended with the death of Archytas and was the starting point for the interventions of mercenary generals such as Archidamos of Sparta, Alexander the Molossus or Pyrrhus of Epirus..

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