Greek art, fame and fake news : the Tyche of Antioch

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by GinoLR, Jun 1, 2025 at 4:16 AM.

  1. GinoLR

    GinoLR Well-Known Member

    This pentanummion (a 5 nummia coin) circulated in Antioch under Justin I (518-527). It represents the centuries-old statue of the Tyche of Antioch, in a distyle shrine.
    upload_2025-6-1_10-2-31.png
    Justin I (518-527), AE pentanummion, Antioch.
    Obv.: d N IVƧTINVƧ P P AVC, diad. dr. and cuir. bust r.
    Rev.: the Tyche of Antioch veiled, wearing mural crown, holding branch, seated l. in distyle shrine, river Orontes swimming at her feet, large Э.

    The period is purely Christian, but this pagan deity in her temple could still be seen on new coins ! An intellectual like John Malalas, who lived and served in Antioch in the 520s, used coins like this one everyday. For him, this statue had a special history : it was the statue of a poor virgin girl named Aimathe who was sacrificed by the king Seleucus when he founded Antioch, many centuries ago. This is what he wrote in his Chronographia:
    "... where the village of Bottia was, across from Iopolis, there he [Seleucus Nicator] staked out the foundations of the wall, and through the agency of Amphion the high priest and officiant of the mysteries he sacrificed a virgin girl by the name of Aimathe in the space between the city and the river on the 22nd of Artemisios, or May, at the first hour of the day, as the sun was rising. He called [the city] after the name of his own son who was called Antiochus Soter. And he straightway established a temple, which he called that of Zeus Bottios. And he swiftly raised the tremendous walls through the agency of Xenarios the architect. He set up a bronze stele in the form of a statue of the maiden who had been offered as a sacrifice as the tyche of the city above the river, and at once he made a sacrifice to her as the Tyche."

    Of course it was 100% fake news, forged by Christian propagandists to vilify the old Hellenic religion.

    Actually, this Tyche of Antioch was a colossal early 3rd c. BC bronze statue made by the sculptor Eutychides of Sycion, a pupil of Lysippus and, according to Pliny, a representative of the last generation of talented Greek sculptors. His floruit was the 121st Olympiad : 296-293 BC. He made a bronze statue of the river Eurotas for the city of Sparta, and a statue of Liber Pater (probably a Dionysos) which could be seen at Rome in the art collection of Asinius Pollio. Another one of his works, a named Timosthenes of Elis, winner of the foot race, could be seen at Olympia.

    His most famous work was the colossal bronze statue of the Tyche of Antioch on the Orontes, a veiled young lady wearing a mural crown, wrapped in her himation, sitting on a rock, with a nude young man swimming in a stream at her feet and representing the Orontes river. It was in the Tychaion, her temple, and was represented on Antioch coins since the Hellenistic times.

    3rd and 4th c. coins of Antioch with this Tyche (Elagabalus, Trebonianus Gallus, Maximinus II) :
    upload_2025-6-1_10-6-25.png

    Under the Roman Empire, the statue became very famous. Small-scale reproductions in marble or bronze were sold to customers from everywhere. The finest marble replica was found in Rome and his now at the Vatican Museum, smaller bronze replicas could be found even in western Europe. In Syria, it became a standard : many cities in north Syria and Mesopotamia copied this model for their own Tyche.

    upload_2025-6-1_10-7-16.png
     
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  3. 7Jags

    7Jags Well-Known Member

    Uggh, hate the contexts of that "fake news" term, but thanks for the rundown. Do you have a picture of the Vatican reproduction?
     
  4. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    Good write up and fantastic array of coinage.
     
  5. GinoLR

    GinoLR Well-Known Member

    upload_2025-6-2_13-6-54.jpeg

    Here is the Vatican statue. It has been found in Rome, I don't know where precisely. The inscription on the base is modern, it says it was offered py pope Pius VI (pope 1775-1799).
     
    Carl Wilmont and 7Jags like this.
  6. Carl Wilmont

    Carl Wilmont Well-Known Member

    Interesting article and coin examples on the Tyche of Antioch, @GinoLR!

    The reverse of this tetradrachm has another depiction of the statue:

    [​IMG]

    Augustus (27 BC – 14 AD). AR Tetradrachm (26mm, 15.10 g, 12h). Antioch mint, Seleucis Pieria, Syria. Dated year 29 of the Actian Era and Cos. XII = October-December 3 BC. ΚAIΣAPOΣ ΣΕ-BAΣTOY (‘of Augustus Caesar’), laureate head of Augustus right, bead and reel border / ETOYΣ ΘΚ NIKHΣ ( 'Year 29 of the victory'), Tyche, holding palm frond in right hand, seated right on rocky outcropping; at her feet, half-length figure of river-god Orontes swimming right; in right field two monograms and IB (consular date) to right, border of dots.

    In a thread that I started several years ago, https://www.cointalk.com/threads/antioch-on-the-orontes.370411/ , I included a photo of a statuette from the 1st-2nd century that is similar to the statue in the Vatican that is posted above.
     
    GinoLR, Bing and philologus_1 like this.
  7. GinoLR

    GinoLR Well-Known Member

    Superb tetradrachm ! Because this coin is dated from the "Victory era" the corn-ears in the Tyche's hand have been replaced by a palm, symbol of victory.
    It's funny to see that the views of this statue on coins are sometimes seen from the left, the right, or from front.

    The statue by Eutychides was remembered as late as the 13th c. On the Peutinger Map, a 13th c. copy of a late Roman road map of the world from Britain to India, three cities only are figured by an enthroned personification : Rome, Constantinople and Antioch. The personification of Antioch is not, at first sight, the Tyche of Eutychides : it derives from the enthroned Justinian we can see on folles of "Theoupolis", the new name of Antioch refounded by this emperor c. 538.

    On the Peutinger Map (or its source, which therefore should be some 6th c. document, like the Madaba Mosaic Map) the enthroned Justinian was understood as the personification of Antioch, and modified in order to resemble the old Eutychides statue : at the feet of the enthroned personification of the city, there is a smaller nude young male character extending his arms : obviously the swimming Orontes of Eutychides' statue...

    upload_2025-6-4_11-54-26.png
     
    Bing and philologus_1 like this.
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