Triptolemos - the Founder of Agriculture

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Jochen1, Mar 31, 2019.

  1. Jochen1

    Jochen1 Well-Known Member

    Dear Friends of ancient mythology!

    About Triptolemos we have heard already in the myth of the Rape of Persephone. The story on this coin is the natural continuation, so to speak.

    The Coin:
    Thrace, Perinthos, Severus Alexander, AD 232-235
    AE 35, 19.8g, 34.70mm, 180°
    obv. AV K M AVP CEV - AΛEΞANΔPOC AV
    bust, draped and cuirassed, seen from behind, radiate, r.
    rev. ΠEPI - NΘIΩ - N / ΔIC NEΩKO / PΩN
    Triptolemos, with waving chlamys, standing r. in biga with two winged snakes, joined together, holding reins in l. hand and sowing grain with raised r. hand
    ref. Schönert pl. 45, 737 (same dies); Varbanov 4072 (same dies)
    rare, VF, nice green-brown patina
    severus_alexander_perinthos_varbanov4085.jpg
    Note:

    In the time after Aurelianus Perinthos was renamed to Heracleia (Thracia)

    Mythology:

    We have heard about Triptolemos already in the myth of the Rape of Persephone. He was one of the five sons of king Keleus of Eleusis and his wife Metaneira. Both have admitted Demeter friendly as guest when she was in search of her daughter Persephone, even though she was disguised and they haven't recognized the goddess. When the elder brother of Triptolemos began to critizise her because she caused by thirst was emptying a whole jar of beer, she angrily transformed him into a lizard. To reparate her deed she decided to make him immortal by holding him above a fire. But Metaneira - anaware of this - interrupted the enchantment and her son died. Keleus was breaking out in tears and complained the fate of his sons. Because of that he is called Dysaules too. Demeter consoled him: "Dry your tears, Dysaules, you have still tree sons from whom I will give Triptolemos such abilities that you will forget the loss of your other two sons."

    Triptolemos had realized Demeter and gave her the crucial advice by which she could finally get her daughter back. Thankfully she teached Triptolemos, his brother Eumolpos and Keleus in worshipping her divinity and in her mysteries. Triptolemos got seed, a wooden plow and a cart dragged by two winged snakes. On the Raric plain in Attica - therefore sometimes called the son of king Raros too - she teached him in the art of agriculture and then sent him over the whole earth so that he could teach all other people. (Ovid Met. V, 450-563)

    There are additional myths where several times assaults on him were tried. So he came with his snake biga at last to Thracia where he was killed by king Lynkos who was punished by transformation into a lynx. (Ovid Met. V, 62-661)

    It is said that he has teached the art to built cities. He had an altar on the Raric plane and his own temple n Eleusis. It is said too that he was one of the three judges in the underworld.

    Background:

    His name Triptolemos probably means 'three-times-shaker = thorough winnower'. (Note: After threshing the grain it was necessary to separate the chaff from the corn. For this purpose the threshed grain was thrown with forks in the air and the wind blew the chaff sidewards. This is called 'winnowing'.) At the end of the 6th century Triptolemos changed from the prototype of a tiller to the propagator of a rural ethos. With his dragon cart - the same Demeter has too (Ovid fast. 4, 497) - he travel on Italy, Illyria, the land of the Getes and Africa. That corresponds to Attic cultural propaganda.

    The Orphics made him as son of Okeanos and Gaia a cosmic power and a symbol of the transition from the herdsmen to the peasant culture, the great revolution at the end of the Neolithicum. From these orphic beliefs probably originates his role as judge of the deads (Platon apol. 41a). As propagator of greek culture he remained alive in the hellenistic and Roman culture and often is seen on coins and other depictions. So there is a silver bowl in Aquileia where the campaign of Germanicus against the East is equated to the transmission of Triptolemos.

    I have added the famous frieze of Triptolemos from Eleusis. Demeter on th l. side hands Triptolemos the sacred grain ears, on the r. side behind him Persephone. This frieze ws located in the Telesterion, the the mysterious big hall in Eleusis
    nm_eleusis_2.jpg

    Literature:

    (1) Ovid, Metamorphoses
    (2) Der kleine Pauly
    (3) Robert von Ranke-Graves, Greek Mythology

    Best regards
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Mar 31, 2019
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  3. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Wow, Demeter sounds cruel and rather careless of mortals and Triptolemos sounds co-dependent :D.

    A fun typo :D

    CharlieSheenWinnowing.jpg


    ...

    I'm fond of provincials featuring Triptolemos.

    This particular chariot looks very slow. Must've taken him forever to sow a field with these stoner serpents.
    [​IMG]
    EGYPT. Alexandria. Trajan
    AE drachm, 33.5 mm, 22.09 g
    Uncertain regnal year
    Obv: [AYT] TPAIANCE BΓEPM∆AKIK; Laureate bust of Trajan to right
    Rev: Triptolemos in a chariot drawn right by two winged Agathodaemon serpents
    Ref: Emmett 601; RPC III 4336.4

    [​IMG]


    A couple more Alexandrians. These crews look like they could get the job done faster.

    [​IMG]
    EGYPT, Alexandria. Antoninus Pius
    year 14, CE 150/1
    AE drachm, 34 mm, 28.8 gm
    Obv: Laureate bust of Antoninus Pius left
    Rev: Triptolemos driving biga of winged serpents right; L IΔ above
    Ref: Emmett 1683.14

    [​IMG]
    EGYPT, Alexandria. Faustina II
    Regnal year 14 of Antoninus Pius (150/1 CE)
    AE drachm, 33 mm, 18.2 gm
    Obv: draped bust right
    Rev: Triptolemos, wearing an elephant head cap and chlamys, driving a biga of winged serpents right; LIΔ above
    Ref: Emmett 2004.14; Dattari 3926


    Here his transportation looks more like a wheelchair (and wouldn't that be a wonderful Halloween costume for a paraplegic? )
    [​IMG]
    ATTICA, Eleusis
    Eleusinian festival coinage
    340-335 BC
    AE16
    Obv: Triptolemos, seated left in a winged chariot drawn by two snakes
    Rev: Pig standing right on mystic staff, bucranium below
    Ref: SNG Cop 415

    EleusisTriptolemos-WheelchairCostume.jpg
     
  4. Jochen1

    Jochen1 Well-Known Member

    Hi TIF!

    Especially the last depiction is funny. Thank you for it! The typo with "winning" I have corrected.

    Best regards
    Jochen
     
  5. Orange Julius

    Orange Julius Well-Known Member

    This coin has had a rough life... but I can't say "no" to giant snakes.

    MarcusAureliusAlexandria.JPG
    Marcus Aurelius. As Caesar
    EGYPT, Alexandria.
    Æ Drachm.
    Dated RY 14 of Antoninus Pius (AD 150/1).
    Bareheaded and draped bust right
    Triptolemus in serpent biga right
    L IΔ (date) above. Köln -; Dattari (Savio) 3210 or 3211; K&G 37.45.
     
  6. Agricantus

    Agricantus Allium aflatunense

    Here’s my Triptolemos with Gaia reclining, Caracalla frowinning (or frowning), and I am still not sure what the snakes are doing. Coin From Hadrianapolis, picture from cng.

    C6A73D6B-5AC5-4C27-AD13-EEEA6A8A4BCC.jpeg
     
  7. Jochen1

    Jochen1 Well-Known Member

    What a beautiful reverse. Never seen before. Congrats!

    Jochen
     
  8. Limes

    Limes Well-Known Member

    I dont have snake coins to share, but i love reading your stories . I then end up lost in wikipedia doing more reading about the subject and looking for pictures. This time i ended up reading about the Sea Peoples and the Greek dark ages. So thanks Jochen!
     
    Jochen1 likes this.
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