Not your friendly neighbourhood Pan...

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by zumbly, May 10, 2017.

  1. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    "Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns - a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs, who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd god, long-haired, unkempt."
    - Homeric Hymn (19) to Pan, c. 7th-6th century BC

    Avert your eyes, animal lovers, the reverse here shows not your usual pipe-playing goat-boy gamboling with nymphs, but one looking more the part of a cruel rabbit-beating, fawn-skinning sociopath, just one step removed from the wild beasts that he was the lord of. I had to do a double take when I first saw this coin, with Pan standing unbowed, looking almost triumphant, sticking a sharp cloven hoof into the chest of a hapless, supine panther. Whaaaat??... I thought he and Dionysos' favored pet were pals!

    I've found nothing in ancient depictions of Pan that show him in quite this manner, but it's very possible that this scene was modeled on a sculpture or painting that was well-known at the time. While rare, this reverse type was also used on a Caracalla bronze of Hadrianopolis, Thrace. If the origin of this unfamiliar treatment of the sylvan god was indeed a piece of art, it's now lost to us except for these coins.

    In the last couple of years, I've really come to love these interesting, oftimes enigmatic provincial types. When I saw this one, I simply had to have it.

    As "pan" used as a prefix means "all-inclusive", please feel free to pile on with pics of whatever you like... Pan coins, pans, pens, underpants... :D

    Elagabalus - Nicopolis Pan Panther.jpg
    ELAGABALUS
    Rare. AE27. 12.24g, 26.9mm. MOESIA INFERIOR, Nicopolis ad Istrum, circa 218-222. Novius Rufus, legate. Varbanov 3949 (same dies); AMNG 1933 corr. (2 specimens). O: AVT M AVP ANTΩ[NINOC, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right. R: VΠ NOBIOV POVΦOV NIKOΠOΛITΩN ΠPO around, C ICTPΩ in exergue, Pan, with goats horns and legs, standing left, draped in nebris (fawn-skin), fawn hooves hanging from left arm, holding lagobolon (rabbit-bashing stick) in right hand, placing left hoof on the chest of submissive panther which is lying on its back on the ground and raising its head.
    Ex Dr. Rainer Pudill Collection, purchased from Majestic, Großostheim, on 24 Sep 1997
     
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  3. David Atherton

    David Atherton Flavian Fanatic

    What a fantastic coin with a most unusual reverse! Enigmatic indeed.
     
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  4. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    Fantastic coin, Z - not a type I've seen before. It's really impossible to keep track of the different manifestations of all the various Greek gods, particularly the local ones. I have a new bust of Pan that just came in, on a tetradrachm of Antigonas Gonatas. These aren't anywhere as rare as your coin, but neither are they a dime-a-dozen...

    gonatas tet 6.jpg
     
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  5. Jwt708

    Jwt708 Well-Known Member

    Me too! That's a very interesting coin.

    For my selection are two coins that I think could possibly illustrate a local cultic site of Ares.

    [​IMG]
    Septimius Severus, AD 193-211
    AE28, 13.4g, 6h; Rabbath-Moba mint, CY 105 = AD 210/11.
    Obv.: AVT K L CEOVHΡOC; Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust of Septimius Severus right, seen from behind.
    Rev.: ΡABBAΘMΩBΩN ΘEOC AΡHC; Ares standing facing on high base with pilasters, between two flaming altars, holding dagger and shield with spear.Date P-E across fields.

    [​IMG]
    Caracalla, AD 198-217
    AE30, 15.2g, 6h; Rabbathmoba, Palestine, dated CY 105 = AD 210-211.
    Obv.: AVT K M AV ANTUNINOC, laureate, draped, cuirassed bust right.
    Rev.: PABBAΘ-MUBUN, Ares standing facing on square base decorated with pilasters, and holding sword, spear and round shield. Lighted torch to left and right. Date P-E across fields.
     
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  6. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    Ooh, that looks like a nice one!
     
  7. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    I like those! The Ares reverse looks quite similar to the provincials of Ascalon with their war god Phanebal.

    IMG_7845.JPG
     
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  8. Jwt708

    Jwt708 Well-Known Member

    Whoa, cool! Well...both cities would were "close" so perhaps it was a local depiction of Phanebal, just reinterpreted in Greco-Roman style?
     
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  9. ancientone

    ancientone Well-Known Member

    An interesting reverse I had not seen! Very nice @zumbly!
     
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  10. gregarious

    gregarious E Pluribus Unum

    super kool coin z!
     
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  11. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    what a cool reverse! it's a very pretty coin anyway, the color is fantastic!

    here a little elagabalus provincial from the same spot on the map...


    [​IMG]


    Elagabalus, 218 - 222 AD, Nikopolis ad Istrum, Moesia Inferior, AE assarion

    O: AVT K M ANTΩNINOC, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right R: ΝΙΚΟΠΟΛΙΤΩΝ ΠΡΟC ΙCΤΡΟΝ, Nike standing left, and Elagabalus standing right holding spear, they erect a trophy of captured arms with two bound captives at the base Varbanov 3859 17.5 mm 3.7 g
     
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  12. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Just... WOW Mr Z!!! You have some of the more coolest coins! Love your Pan! What a cool story. Those are the historical coins I just love. Well done.

    I have a couple Pan-like coins...

    Thrace Pantikapaion 4th C BC, AE 20 Pan head - Griffin forepart BMC 869.jpg
    Thrace Pantikapaion 4th C BC, AE 20 Pan head - Griffin forepart BMC 869

    RR C Vibius CF CN Pansa 48 BCE AR Denarius Pan Jupiter Anxurus Sear 420 Craw 449-1.jpg
    RR C Vibius CF CN Pansa 48 BCE AR Denarius Pan Jupiter Anxurus Sear 420 Craw 449/1

    LOL, how about a Pan Liang: :D :D :D
    (Yeah, the @TypeCoin971793 coin-Dude will give me crap about P vs B, but it depends WHERE you are in China as to how things are pronounced! :D )

    China AE Pan-Liang 2nd C BC.jpg
    China AE Pan-Liang 2nd C BC
     
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  13. Carausius

    Carausius Brother, can you spare a sestertius?

    Naming puns on ancient coins became popular early with the Greeks (i.e. celery plant on coins of Selinos), and continued with the Romans. C. Vibius Pansa, the Roman, liked to joke about his name by depicting Pan on his coins. His Pan/Silenus denarius (posted once or twice in the past) below:

    2295846l.jpg
     
    Last edited: May 10, 2017
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  14. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    Really like this coin of yours, Chris. I think then portrait is particularly nice for a smaller provincial bronze and that slick black patina is wicked!
     
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  15. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    Thanks for the comments and coinshares, everyone... yeah, even that Pan Liang, Imperator Al :D.
     
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  16. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    It's Pan-demonium in this thread!

    Very very cool, coin, Z :)

    I have a few Pans to toss in the pot...

    [​IMG]
    THRACE, Hadrianopolis. Gordian III
    AE 22 mm, 5.18 gm
    Obv: AVT K M ANT ΓOPΔIANOC; radiate head right
    Rev: AΔPIANOΠOΛЄITΩN; Pan advancing left, holding syrinx and lagobolon
    Ref: Varbanov 3945 corr. (cantharus in place of syrinx)

    [​IMG]
    ARKADIA, Arkadian League
    340-330 BC, Megalopolis mint
    AR Obol, 11 mm, 0.77 g
    Obv: head of Pan left
    Rev: large Arkadian League monogram; syrinx below
    Ref: BCD Peloponnesos (Megalopolis) 1517-8; HGC 5, 930
    ex BCD Collection. Ex Vinchon (11-13 April 1988), lot 463

    [​IMG]
    KINGS OF MACEDON, Antigonos II Gonatas
    277/6-239 BCE, struck after 270 BCE, Amphipolis mint
    AR tetradrachm, 31mm, 17.06 g
    Obv: head of Pan in center of Macedonian shield, lagobolon over shoulder; shield decorated with stars within crescents
    Rev: BASILEWS ANTIGONOU, Athena Alkidemos walking left, brandishing thunderbolt and shield; helmet left, EMP monogram right
    Ref: SNGCop 1200v, EMP (maybe); R. Martin, "A Third-Century B.C. Hoard from Thessaly at the ANS," ANSMN 26, 536 (same obv. die).
    ex Demetrios Armounta Collection


    Not a Pan, but Pan's bunny basher:

    [​IMG]
    ILLYRIA, Apollonia
    c. 1st century BCE
    AR 15 mm, 1.25 gm
    Obv: AI-NEA; fires of the Nymphaeum of Apollonia; dotted border
    Rev: AΠOΛΛΩ-NIATAN, lagobolon; dotted border
    Ref: BMC 44; Maier 121
     
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  17. zumbly

    zumbly Ha'ina 'ia mai ana ka puana

    I'm very jealous of that first Pan of yours... it's terrific!
     
    TIF likes this.
  18. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    LOL!!! :D
     
  19. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Total winner, Z-Bro ... congrats (I'm jealous of that baby)
     
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  20. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

    Great coin!
     
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  21. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    ah yeah...PUN TIME!


    bad-puns-14.jpg
     
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