Corinth AR Stater Pegasus - My 2nd Ancient Purchase

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Joe2007, Dec 5, 2015.

  1. Joe2007

    Joe2007 Well-Known Member

    Thanks I will. I've been lurking here for a while. Lots of fantastic ancients around here.
     
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  3. brassnautilus

    brassnautilus Well-Known Member

    is that really a corinthia?
    I had never seen corinth athena without the neck piece, 5th, 4th or 3rd century BC style, never ever...
     
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  4. brassnautilus

    brassnautilus Well-Known Member

    and that's a big head for 515-450ish BC. Left facng are rare for those to begin with, but that size of a head and exposed neck?
     
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  5. Joe2007

    Joe2007 Well-Known Member

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  6. 7Calbrey

    7Calbrey Well-Known Member

    This tiny silver coin has Pegasus head-right. The obverse shows an incused facing shape. Till now, no body could determine if it's Corinthian or even guess the nearest possible ID. Pegasus.jpg Pegas Face.jpg
     
  7. brassnautilus

    brassnautilus Well-Known Member

    akarnania obol or something. trihemiobol?
     
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  8. 7Calbrey

    7Calbrey Well-Known Member

    Thanks BN. Dimension is 12mm, but the coin is thick and heavy: 2.4 g. BTW.. I don't understand the word Akarnania.
     
  9. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Arkarnania (also spelled Acarnania) is a region of Greece:

    [​IMG]

    On Wildwinds I didn't see anything like your coin for any of the cities of Akarnania.

    The facing image may be an aegis of Medusa. Medusa is the mother of Pegasus, so that makes sense.
     
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  10. 7Calbrey

    7Calbrey Well-Known Member

    Great.. I had to search and found out that during the fifth century B.C. the Arcananians were allied with Athens in order to maintain their independence against Corinth and Sparta. However, Arcanania came under Spartan control sometime in the next fourth century B.C.
     
  11. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    that's strange 7C, looks like a pontos gorgon with a corinth peagsus.
     
  12. 4to2centBC

    4to2centBC Well-Known Member

    If you encapsulate but do not authenticate
    then the
    encapsulation hinders the authentication
    and effects all
    speculation, valuation and admiration
    for a coin so puzzling.

    signed....Slabby

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]


     
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  13. brassnautilus

    brassnautilus Well-Known Member

    there are trihemiobol from both akarnania and corinthia (and somewhere else I think) with that general configuration but obviously those were tiny, half a gram.

    TBH that doesn't really look like a gorgon to me. Gorgons are round, that's rectangular. Maybe it was a shield?
     
  14. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    AKARNANIA Stater
    350-250 B.C.
    Mint: Anactorium
    Diameter: 22.3 mm
    Weight: 8.53 grams
    Obverse: Pegasus with pointed wing flying left, mint mark AN monogram below
    Reverse: Head of Athena left, wearing Corinthian helmet over leather cap, magistrate’s names KΛE above and monogram below, mint mark AN monogram and control-symbol filleted bucranium behind

    ancients666f.jpg ancients666ex.jpg
     
    Last edited: Dec 6, 2015
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  15. 7Calbrey

    7Calbrey Well-Known Member

    In 314 B.C. the Arcananians formed a new city league around Stratus, their chief city. It existed until the year 30 B.C. when Arcanania was was included in the Roman province of Achaea. Maybe that could help a little bit..
     
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  16. Collect89

    Collect89 Coin Collector

  17. brassnautilus

    brassnautilus Well-Known Member

    came across this guy, similar to joe's and attributed same way. 515-450 BC corinth.
    Pegasi 71; Ravel 211
    [​IMG]
     
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  18. 7Calbrey

    7Calbrey Well-Known Member

    My latest modest research showed that the coin I posted above is a Half Siglos, an ancient Greek denomination.
     
  19. Jwt708

    Jwt708 Well-Known Member

    Nice poem Slabby!
     
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  20. Joe2007

    Joe2007 Well-Known Member

    Thank you! That looks very close to my coin
     
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