Perseus

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by old49er, May 26, 2018.

  1. old49er

    old49er Well-Known Member

    Hi all, This Perseus coin is among my favorite Ancient coins. Reminds me of an ancient mercury Dime. Please share any Perseus Coins, would enjoy seeing them.:) perseuscoinobv.jpg perseuscoinrev.jpg
     
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  3. Ancient Aussie

    Ancient Aussie Well-Known Member

    I unfortunately don't own one, but yours has great eye appeal, great coin.
     
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  4. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    I like the type very much!

    I have multiples of the Pontos "Perseus immediately after slaying Medusa" coins. The type is quite popular among CT members :)

    My first one, selected for the excellent "gushing blood" from the body of Medusa:
    [​IMG]

    The second, because it was an unexpected find at a jewelry store on St. John USVI, and it was cheap:
    [​IMG]

    (the above coin before cleaning)
    [​IMG]

    And somewhat accidental bidding acquisition :D :
    [​IMG]
    PONTOS, Amisos
    85-65 BCE, time of Mithradates VI Eupator
    AE, (each is 27-29 mm)
    Obv: helmeted head of Athena right; helmet decorated with griffin
    Rev: AMIΣOY; Perseus standing facing, holding harpa and head of Medusa, Medusa's body at his feet, blood gushing from the neck; monogram in left field
     
  5. Ed Snible

    Ed Snible Well-Known Member

    The hero Perseus grew up on the island of Seriphos. The little island honored him on its coinage.

    136124.jpg
    Cyclades, Seriphos. 2nd-1st century BC? 2.95g. AE14
    Helmeted head of Perseus right
    CΕΡΕΙ-ΦΙWΝ; Harpa
    Auctiones AG, auction 29, June 2003, lot 357 (J. P. Righetti collection)
     
  6. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    WOW, what a fantastic coin!! I'm envious.
     
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  7. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    My only Perseus coin, a tiny bronze:
    Perseus Macedonia AE 15.jpg
    Perseus, 179-168 BC.
    Greek AE 14.8 mm; 2.77 g Macedonia.
    Obv: Macedonian shield; wheel-ornament in center.
    Rev: ΒΑ-ΠΕ above and below harpe, star below.
    Refs: Sear Greek 6809; SNG Cop 1281; Lindren II (Europe) 1339; Gaebler 12.5.36.

    Why is a harpe on the reverse of this coin?

    The harpē (ἅρπη) was a type of sword with a sickle protrusion along one edge near the tip of the blade. According to legend, Perseus use a harpe to cut off the head of Medusa.

    524px-Perseus_Canova_Pio-Clementino_Inv969.jpg
    "Perseus holding Medusa's head" depicts Perseus armed with a harpe sword when he beheaded Medusa.
    Marble sculpture by Antonio Canova (Vatican Museum).

    Note Perseus' winged helmet in this sculpture, just as depicted on @old49er 's coin in the OP.
     
    Last edited: May 26, 2018
  8. Alegandron

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

    You have a very nice AE @old49er ! Would enjoy having that in my collection also.
    :) I guess it is always perspective, but I personally feel Ancient to me is BCE or 1,900 YEARS before the Mercury Dime. :)

    I have a couple coins depicting Perseus:

    upload_2018-5-26_6-47-14.png
    PONTOS Amisos
    85-65 BCE
    Æ24 12.2g
    Obv: Mithradates VI as Perseus r Phrygian helmet
    Rev: Pegasos grazing l
    Malloy 33b HGC 7 239


    Fair play - it looks like Perseus had HIS head removed also!
    Pontos Amisos Mithradates VI 109-89 BC AE 28 Athena Perseus Medusa Head Body.jpg
    Pontos Amisos
    Mithradates VI 109-89 BC
    AE 28 Athena
    Perseus Medusa Head Body
     
  9. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    sinope.jpg
    SINOPE, PAPHLAGONIA
    AE16
    OBVERSE: Winged head of young Perseus
    REVERSE: SINW-PHS, cornucopiae between two pilei of the Dioskouroi, each surmounted by a star
    Struck at Sinope, 120-100 BC
    4.09g, 16mm
    SNG Cop 306, SNGvA 231, Sear 3713
    Ex JAZ Numismatics
     
  10. ominus1

    ominus1 Well-Known Member

    Perseus was the last king of Macedon that wasn't under Roman rule, if i remember my history reading correctly.. greek coins birds ptolemy, peresus 005.JPG greek coins birds ptolemy, peresus 006.JPG
     
  11. Ryro

    Ryro Trying to remove supporter status

    We have the mythic Perseus who slayed the Gorgon medusa...
    (And, no, you aren't seeing triple from the day drinking that you are doing being that it's Saturday. That's a triple strike!)
    CollageMaker Plus_201846165739291.png

    Pontos. Amisos c 85-65 BC.
    Bronze Æ, 30mm., 18,18g.
    Helmeted head of Athena right,
    helmet decorated with griffin /
    AMIOY Perseus standing holding
    harpa and head of Medusa, at feet,
    body of Medusa, monograms to
    both sides.VF Sea 1166-76 (same).

    And then there is Perseus son of Philip V

    CollageMaker Plus_201846174930402.png

    Philip V and Perseus.Ca.
    221-168 B.C.E
    Macedonian Kingdom. AE
    unit (17.1 mm, 6.07 g, 12 h).
    Uncertain Macedonian mint.
    Macedonian shield, star with
    spiral arms/swastika in
    center boss / M-K, ΔONΩN,
    Macedonian helmet with
    cheek guards, BA
    monogram below. SNG
    Alpha Bank -; SNG Cop -;
    McClean 3666. VF. Rare.
     
  12. Ryro

    Ryro Trying to remove supporter status

    Beautiful coin! I can see why it's your fav (and it looks a LOT like a merc dime...but much cooler being ancient). Do we know where it's from or what the symbols on the reverse mean?
     
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  13. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    It's from Macedonia, where Perseus was king. The BA stands for Basileus, meaning "king." The ΠΕ stands for Perseus.
     
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  14. Bert Gedin

    Bert Gedin Well-Known Member

    A snippet of Perseus info. "On his return journey, Perseus saw a naked girl chained to a rock on the sea coast near Joppa. He flew down, and was just in time to prevent her from being devoured by a sea monster: he turned it to stone by uncovering the head of Medusa." Now that's the end of the story, for now. So sleep well, all my little darlings !"
     
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  15. ominus1

    ominus1 Well-Known Member

    ..when i think or look at this coin, i think of you Ryro...it's one of those required for the Alex/Greek collection :)..Edited: oops, you've got a coin of him already..just not this type..my bad! 9_9...
     
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  16. Ed Snible

    Ed Snible Well-Known Member

    Does anyone have coinage depicting Andromeda? Only a few cities illustrated this part of the myth. Here is where I prove I am not collector type 3 "The Aesthete" nor 4 "The Perfectionist".

    deultum-both.jpg
    Thrace, Deultum. Tranquillina (241-244AD) AE22 6.64g
    Obv: SAB TRANQVILLINA AVG; Draped bust right, wearing stephane
    Rev: [COL FL] PAC DEVLT Perseus and Andromeda standing facing one another; Andromeda on left with left hand raised, Perseus on right, holding harpa and gorgon’s head, releasing Andromeda from her chains; sea-monster turned to stone below.
    Ref: Youroukova, Deultum 411; SNG Bulgaria 1518-20; Varbanov 2945. Mionnet Suppl. II #574
     
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  17. ominus1

    ominus1 Well-Known Member

    that's a nice coin Ed...
     
  18. ominus1

    ominus1 Well-Known Member

    hehe... we appreciate you going out of the Roman circle to ID Greek coins RC :)
     
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  19. Bert Gedin

    Bert Gedin Well-Known Member

    Ed Snible and others interested in Greek Mythology. Maybe someone here can show photos of coins with Andromeda. Otherwise, why not google, requesting "Andromeda on Coins"- you will get results. Such as Photos of such coins and text, for instance - "1689 White Metal. William & Mary Coronation Medal. Persius delivering Andromeda from a sea monster. By George Bower. 37 mm, 14.71 grams. Medallic Illustration 663/26." Also, many books of Greek Mythology will include relevant stories.
     
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  20. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    I think Ed's was interested in seeing if any CT members own coins depicting Andromeda :) He showed one such coin.
     
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  21. ominus1

    ominus1 Well-Known Member

    ..and thus proving he's not a collector # 3 or 4 :p
     
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