Artemis

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Randy Abercrombie, Apr 10, 2026 at 9:42 PM.

  1. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    As I understand, Artemis is a Greek Goddess. Has she been portrayed on any ancient coins? If so and if you have one, please share!
     
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  3. CoinCorgi

    CoinCorgi Well, butter my butt and call me a biscuit!

    No clue Randy.

    It was amazing to watch the splash down of the Integrity capsule this afternoon. Reminded me of watching the Apollo missions. Watched a SpaceX launch earlier this week and there's another one scheduled for tonight from Vandenburg Space Force Base. Go go gadget!
     
  4. BuffaloHunter

    BuffaloHunter Short of a full herd Supporter

    How fitting, Randy! Can’t wait to see the answers and hopefully coins that pop into this thread!
     
  5. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

  6. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

  7. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    There's definitely lots of ancient coins depicting Artemis. I don't happen to have any, but I do have this one featuring the cult statue of Diana, which was the Roman version of Artemis.

    Claudius cistophorus Diana.jpg
    CLAUDIUS, AD 41-54
    AR Cistophorus (27.39mm, 10.43g, 7h)
    Struck AD 51. Ephesus mint
    Obverse: TI CLAVD CAES AVG AGRIPP AVGVSTA, jugate busts of Agrippina Junior, draped, and Claudius, laureate, left
    Reverse: DIANA EPHESIA, cultus-statue of the Ephesian Diana standing facing, with supports
    References: RIC I 119 (R2), RCV 1888
    Toned. A scarce and interesting dual portrait type. This coin was struck in the great provincial city of Ephesus in Asia Minor, around the time of the apostle Paul's visit as recorded in Acts 19. The reverse design depicting "Diana of the Ephesians" bears a powerful connection to the story of the riot that took place there in reaction to Paul's preaching against the worship of the goddess.

     
  8. Orange Julius

    Orange Julius Well-Known Member

    Here’s one with Diana:

    “Diana was the Roman goddess of hunting, bringer of light, youthful and strictly virginal, and later, goddess of the moon. She had so many attributes in common with the Greek goddess Artemis that they are often treated as the same, though that is not strictly true.” https://www.forumancientcoins.com/m...Wi44XaNDIwR6zrUULPTo64gaKIzl7fSL4lXbtzuHS4PfQ
    ClaudiusIIAntiochRICV-1-205.JPG

    Claudius II (Gothicus) AD 268-270. Antioch
    IMP C CLAVDIVS AVG, radiate, draped and cuirassed bust right
    DIANAE VICTR, Diana standing right, drawing arrow from quiver and holding bow; at feet to right, stag standing right; H in exergue.
    very fine
    RIC V-1 205, RIC V online 1031.
     
  9. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan Eclectic numismatist Moderator

    I don't have any Artemis (the Greek version) or Diana (the Roman version), but I'm sure there are plenty out there.
     
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  10. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan Eclectic numismatist Moderator

    That is a really handsome cistophorus.
     
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