Search


CNG Bidding Platform

Information

Products and Services



Research Coins: Electronic Auction

 
200, Lot: 38. Estimate $150.
Sold for $155. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

THESSALY, Thessalian League. Circa 196-27 BC. AR Stater (26mm, 6.21 g, 12h). Philozenides and Damothoinos, magistrates. Laureate head of Zeus right / Athena Itonia advancing right; [ΦIΛ]OXE-NIΔH[Σ] above spear, [ΔA]MOΘOINO[Σ] in exergue. McClean 4754; BMC 33. Good VF, toned, two splits on edge.


From the Norman Frank Collection.

Beginning about 1000 BC, the two plains of Thessaly, comprising a number of cities led by aristocratic families, were untied in a federation under a single chief, or archon. The Thessalian League (or Confederacy) was created in the late sixth century BC by Aleuas the Red, who reorganized the state into a unity of four tetrads of four cities under the archon (also called tagos). The federation became increasingly weak following the outbreak of internal rivalries in the fifth century BC. In the aftermath of the Lamian War, and further intrigues in the third century BC, Thessaly was effectively partitioned between Macedon and the Aitolian Confederacy, and was relegated to a setting for competing militaries, including the Romans. After T. Quinctius Flaminius declared Greek freedom in 196 BC, the Thessalian cities were liberated, leading to the inception of the last Thessalian coinage series. This series, comprised solely of silver coinage in three denominations (stater, drachm, and hemidrachm/obol), was the first truly Thessalian League "federal" coinage. All issues bore the ethnic ΘEΣΣAΛIΩN, along with the responsible magistrates' names, and were likely minted at Larissa, the captial of the League. The types employed were few, but all are familiar types appearing on various Thessalian coinages during the previous two hundred years: Zeus, Apollo, Athena Itonia (the "Thessalian Pallas"), and the bridled horse. The terminal date of the series is tied to the end of Thessaly proper, when it was incorporated by the Romans into the new province of Macedonia.