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v49_0290 - SYRIA - SELEUKID KINGDOM - ANTIOCHUS III THE GREAT Hemichalque, (PBQ, Æ 14)

SYRIA - SELEUKID KINGDOM - ANTIOCHUS III THE GREAT Hemichalque, (PBQ, Æ 14) AU
MONNAIES 49 (2011)
Starting price : 125.00 €
Estimate : 200.00 €
Realised price : 130.00 €
Number of bids : 2
Maximum bid : 130.00 €
Type : Hemichalque, (PBQ, Æ 14)
Date: c. 223-187 AC.
Mint name / Town : Tyr, Phénicie
Metal : copper
Diameter : 14 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Weight : 1,78 g.
Rarity : R1
Coments on the condition:
Exemplaire sur petit flan, bien centré, mais court sur la légende de revers. Beau portrait particulier. Joli revers de style fin et de haut relief. Magnifique patine vert olive foncé
Catalogue references :
Predigree :
Cet exemplaire provient du stock CGB (1994)

Obverse


Obverse legend : ANÉPIGRAPHE.
Obverse description : Tête diadémée (tainia) d’Antiochus III sous les traits d”Héraklès (Hercule) coiffée de la léonté nouée sous le cou.

Reverse


Reverse description : Palmier dattier.
Reverse legend : BA[SILEWS] - ANTI-OCOU

Commentary


Sur cet exemplaire, les traits d’Antiochus III sont stylisés. Il semble paré de la léonté d’Héraklès ce qui ne semble pas signalé. En revanche les petits bronzes datés de Tyr (HGCS. 10/ 366 présentent les mêmes caractéristiques.

Historical background


SYRIA - SELEUKID KINGDOM - ANTIOCHUS III THE GREAT

(223-187 BC)

Antiochus III, second son of Seleucus II, succeeded his brother Seleucus III in 223 BC. He first had to put down the revolt of Molon, a satrap of Media who had revolted and was only eliminated in 220 BC Having made the mistake of entrusting the military command of Asia Minor to his uncle Achaios, the latter revolted and Antiochus did not overcome the revolt until after the capture of Sardis in 214 BC. .-C. The decapitated usurper, he then restored Seleucid power in Parthia and Bactria. After Philip V was defeated at Cynoscephali and welcomed the exiled Hannibal, he became an implacable enemy of the Romans. After a first series of victories, he was finally defeated at Thermopylae and Magnesia in 189 BC. He had to sign the Peace of Apamea the following year, consecrating Roman hegemony and the end of Seleucid domination in Asia Minor, leaving Pergamum the arbiter of the situation. He was assassinated in 187 BC.

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