Cales Campania rooster coin questions

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Nathan P, Jul 28, 2020.

  1. Nathan P

    Nathan P Well-Known Member

    So, I recently won this coin.

    43934_0.jpg

    Campania, Cales Bronze circa 265-260, Æ 23mm., 6.52g. Head of Athena l., wearing Corinthian helmet. Rev. Cock standing r.; in l. field, star. Sambon 916. Historia Numorum Italy 435.

    My questions are, 1) Why are the coins of Campania, Cales almost uniformly confined to no earlier than 265 BC (and usually no later than 240 BC, though that's not true for the coin above)? - I can't really find anything that would pinpoint 265 BC as being so critically important. 2) What is the significance, if any, of the rooster which was so common with this area's coinage?

    Thanks!
     
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  3. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

    The dating for the coins of Cales has been neglected, but Dr. Sisci and I proposed a new dating scheme for many of the bronzes in Potamikon.
     
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  4. Scipio

    Scipio Well-Known Member

    Cales was a Roman colony since 335 BC, and his coinage is closely related to the ones of other Greek towns conquered by the Romans between Campania and Samnium, like Caiatia, Teanum, Venafrum, Suessa. All of them issued coins with the sun/rooster symbols At the reverse and often Minerva at the obverse. It is believed that these towns were part of a “common market” and their issues were purposedly similar, to ease commerce among them.
    Around 275 BC similar coins were issued by campanian mints (Crawford 17/1 Minerva/Horse) with ROMANO legend, to be used in exchanges between Campania and Rome. After the second Punic war, in which Cales refused help to Rome, the town lost several rights, included minting.
     
    Last edited: Jul 28, 2020
  5. Alegandron

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

    ROOSTER

    [​IMG]
    Campania Cales 256-240 BC AE 18 Athena Rooster Cock Star
     
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  6. octavius

    octavius Well-Known Member

    Teanum, 265 - 240BC....

    7DpCPfX2y4mL9H9bDiG86EkYjFs5Z3.jpg 1555902l.jpg 4779746l.jpg
     
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  7. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    Mine is AE19 and 5.7g. The man with the hammer was particularly strong on yours. The fabric suggests striking on round globe flans rather like we see in Syracuse.
    g10320bb0508.jpg
     
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  8. NewStyleKing

    NewStyleKing Beware of Greeks bearing wreaths

    What does the Rooster signify?
    I have a NewStyle Cock with Palm supposedly to do with Dionysos?

    Athens New Style Tetradrachm c 146/5 BC
    Obs : Athena Parthenos right in tri-form helmet
    34 mm Thompson issue 18
    Thompson catalogue:Obs Gaziantep 146?:Rev NEW?
    Rev : ΑΘΕ ethnic
    Owl standing on overturned panathenaic amphora
    below control mark ME
    2 magistrates : XAPΙ ΗPA
    RF symbol : Cock with Palm
    All within a surrounding olive wreath
    [​IMG]
     
  9. Justin Lee

    Justin Lee I learn by doing

    [​IMG]
    Campania, Cales, AE21
    Struck 265-240 BC

    Obverse: CALENO, laureate head of Apollo left; behind, cock standing right.
    Reverse: Man-headed bull standing right; lyre above, Δ below.
    References: SNG Morcom 75 var, HN Italy 436, SNG ANS 175 var, Laffaille 12 var, BMC 14
    Size: 21mm, 6.36g
    Note: Rare without ethnic on reverse. Same obv/rev dies as CNG inventory #750588.
     
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