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v34_0075 - SICILY - SICULO-PUNIC - LILYBAION Tétradrachme

SICILY - SICULO-PUNIC - LILYBAION Tétradrachme MS/AU
MONNAIES 34 (2008)
Starting price : 1 000.00 €
Estimate : 1 900.00 €
Realised price : 1 000.00 €
Number of bids : 1
Maximum bid : 1 355.00 €
Type : Tétradrachme
Date: c. 325 AC.
Mint name / Town : Machanat (Le Camp), Lilybée
Metal : silver
Diameter : 26,5 mm
Orientation dies : 9 h.
Weight : 16,51 g.
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire sur un flan large parfaitement centré des deux côtés. Portrait de toute beauté bien particulier. Petit cheval nerveux au revers sur un flan légèrement décentré. Magnifique patine de médaillier avec des reflets mordorés, légèrement granuleuse au revers sur la tranche
Predigree :
Cet exemplaire provient de MONNAIES IV, n° 24

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Tête de Melqart (Héraklès) imberbe à droite, coiffée de la léonté nouée sous le cou.

Reverse


Reverse legend : LETTRES PUNIQUES (MACHANAT).
Reverse description : Tête et cou de cheval à gauche ; derrière un palmier.

Commentary


Poids léger. Mêmes coins que les exemplaires des musées de Berlin, de Philadelphie. Même coin de droit que l’exemplaire MONNAIES XVI, n° 17.

Historical background


SICILY - SICULO-PUNIC - LILYBAION

(350-300 BC)

GK Jenkins, in the Revue Suisse de Numismatique, proposed the attribution to Lilybée for the Carthaginian series from Sicily to the legend of the camp (Machanat). The city was on the west coast of the island, not far from Motya and Eryx. The conflict between Carthaginians and Greeks and then Romans lasted more than three centuries. Carthage, the great metropolis of Tyrian origin, had been founded in 814 BC and its mythical queen, Dido, after having loved Aeneas, predicted the fierce hatred that Carthage and the new city that was to be founded by the Trojan in exile, Rome. The first major battle took place near Himera in 480 BC between the Greeks of Gelon and the Carthaginians. The western part of the island was often dominated by invaders. The second wave of invasions occurred after the disastrous Athenian operation of Alcibiades in 413 BC. A certain status quo was then established until the First Punic War (268-241 AC.) which saw the loss definitive of Sicily for the Carthaginians.

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