Well, I started-out just bidding-on the super cool fourree ... but then I started thinking that it'd be better to have an authentic example to emphasize the cool-factor => and here is the end result ... BAKTRIA, Indo-Greek Kingdom. Hermaios. Fourrée AR Drachm Circa 105-90 BC Diameter: 17 mm Weight: 1.88 grams Obverse: Hermaios on horse right Reverse: Zeus enthroned facing slightly left, raising hand and holding scepter; monogram to right Reference: Cf. Senior, Hermaios H2cD; cf. Bopearachchi 8A; cf. HGC 12, 296 (all refs for official issue) Other: 12h … toned, some deposits and breaks in plating BAKTRIA, Indo-Greek Kingdom. Antialkidas Nikephoros, AR Drachm Circa 130-120 BC Diameter: 17 mm Weight: 2.46 grams Obverse: Diademed, draped, and cuirassed bust right, wearing crested helmet adorned with bull’s horn and ear Reverse: Zeus seated facing slightly left, holding Nike and scepter; to left, forepart of elephant right; monogram to right Reference: Bopearachchi 12A; HGC 12, 258 Other: 12h … toned, minor porosity => oh, and here are the two new reverses in a pose-down with each other ... ... yah, I thought it was a pretty cool score I stole both examples "under their initial estimates" (cha-ching!)
A seriously cool series of coins, especially the tetradrachms. The only one I have in my collection: Baktria, Greco-Baktrian Kingdom, Demetrios I, circa 200 - 185 BC Æ Triple Unit, 31mm, 12.49g Obverse: Head of elephant three quarters facing to right with raised trunk and wearing bell. Reverse: BASILEWS DHMHTRIOU, Caduceus, monogram in left field. Reference:Bopearachchi 5E SNG ANS 209 MIG 108b Provenance: CNG Electronic Auctions 164, lot 164, $225 ($252) May 2007
That's a very sweet example, Ken-D (congrats) => I happen to have one of those sweeties as well ... I'm callin' my version a Trichalkon (is that also correct?) Demetrius I Trichalkon 200-185 BC Diameter: 29.5 mm Weight: 12.61 grams Bactrian Kings, Demetrius I, bronze Attic trichalkon of: Obverse: Head of elephant with bell hanging from neck Reverse: Caduceus. Reference: Bopearachchi-16, Mitchiner-1086, SNG ANS 209 Other: LOVELY brown and green patina, great example NOTE => this is Demetrios I (Bactrian King) which is different from Demetrios I (Seleukid King) ... yah, I've fallen for that trick a few times, eh? "Bactria was a country in Central Asia, mostly on the territory of modern Afghanistan. The land along the Silk Route was an important transit centre for trade between Orient and Occident over countless centuries. Nevertheless, the history of Bactria is hardly known. Even the reigns of the Bactrian kings are difficult to ascertain." ... wiki
Oh, and please post any relevant, or irrelevant examples ... => maybe your Baktrian coins, or your elephants, or your fourrees, etc, etc ... or whatever floats your boat, my coin-friends!! Cheers
Ummm, how 'bout I toss-in my other sweet fourree? KINGS of MACEDON. Philip III Arrhidaios. Fourrée Fifth Tetradrachm 323-317 BC Copying Amphipolis mint issue struck under Polyperchon, circa 318–317 BC Diameter: 13 mm Weight: 1.94 grams Obverse: Head of Apollo right, wearing tainia Reverse: Youth on horseback right; shield below Reference: For prototype, cf. Le Rider pl. 46, 29 & 32; cf. Troxell, Studies, Group 8, 382; cf. SNG ANS 731-5 Other: 8h … VF, toned, breaks in plating exposing bronze core From the collection of a Southern Pathologist, purchased from Antioch Associates, 23 February 1998 ... they look kinda cool together, eh?
Hmmm, curious? Which of my two new OP-coins is your favourite? 1) the sweet fourree ($120 hammer) ... $150 estimate 2) or the cool authentic ($95 hammer) ... $100 estimate ... thanks
Wow, two votes for the authentic, eh? (funny, because I totally got lured-in by the cool fourree) THC => hey, your 1/2-elephant is facing the other direction (man, apparently I need to get a 3rd example!!) ... thanks guys
Apples and oranges for me. I like a few fourees in my collection, especially if they clearly demonstrate the base metal core, but have enough silver for eye-appeal. Anyway, if you can't decide between two coins, the best policy is to get them both.
Well spotted ! There are different versions of the Antialkidas drachms, with helmet, kausia, or bare headed. Each has a standard direction in which the elephant is facing. The one i showed is the uncommon exception for the helmeted type. Antiakidas is one of the more interesting Indo-Greek rulers as he is one of the few referenced in contemporary written accounts which have been preserved, like this from the Indian Heliodorus pillar: