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bgr_300885 - PHOENICIA - TYRE Seizième de shekel

PHOENICIA - TYRE Seizième de shekel XF
Not available.
Item sold on our e-shop (2015)
Price : 350.00 €
Type : Seizième de shekel
Date: c. 425-394 AC.
Mint name / Town : Tyr, Phénicie
Metal : silver
Diameter : 9,5 mm
Orientation dies : 9 h.
Weight : 0,74 g.
Rarity : R2
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire sur un petit flan ovale et irrégulier, bien centré des deux côtés. Faiblesse de frappe au centre des sujets des deux côtés. Patine grise superficielle avec des reflets dorés
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Hippocampe ailé volant à gauche au-dessus des flots figurés par des lignes en zigzag ; grènetis circulaire cordelé.

Reverse


Reverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Reverse description : Chouette debout à droite, la tête de face, tenant transversalement un sceptre et un fléau égyptien ; grènetis circulaire cordelé.

Commentary


Type anépigraphe. Les petites monnaies divisionnaires sont normalement beaucoup plus rares que les shekels, en particulier en bon état de conservation. Ce type en particulier avec l’hippocampe à gauche est infiniment plus rare. De plus sur cet exemplaire, le dauphin sous l’hippocampe semble absent.

Historical background


PHOENICIA - TYRE

(5th - 4th century BC)

Tyre, according to tradition, seems to have been founded by settlers from Sidon, its future great rival. Tyrian settlers founded Carthage in 814 BC. Tire was one of the main ports of Phenicia and one of the most important trading places in the Eastern Mediterranean. Tire refused to submit to Alexander the Great in 332 BC. The siege of the city lasted seven months from January to August under very difficult conditions. Alexander was ruthless and had the population massacred or enslaved. Tire did not disappear, was rebuilt. After the death of Alexander, it often changed masters: Perdiccas in 321 AC., Ptolemy the following year, then it was the turn of Antigone le Borgne in 314 before returning to Ptolemy's hands two years later. In 294 BC, Tire entered Seleucid orbit. After 274 BC, a new era seems to begin for Tyr. The city will be autonomous after 126 before J. - C. and will know a new political and economic rise without forgetting monetary which will continue under the Roman domination.

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