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Research Coins: Electronic Auction

 
227, Lot: 10. Estimate $300.
Sold for $900. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

SICILY, Panormos (as Ziz). Circa 425-415 BC. AR Tetradrachm (26mm, 16.50 g, 8h). Charioteer, holding kentron and reins, driving fast quadriga left / Head of Arethusa right, wearing single-pendant earring; three dolphins around. Jenkins, Punic 3 (O2/R2’); SNG ANS -. Near VF, toned, some porosity.


Ex Hirsch 261 (7-8 May 2009), lot 125.

In the final decade of the 5th century BC the Carthaginians launched a series of invasions of Sicily, conquering much of the western half of the island and bringing devastation to many formerly flourishing Greek communities. The Punic presence lasted for a century and a half, until Rome's victory in the First Punic War obliged them to withdraw. During their time of occupation, the Carthaginians struck an extensive coinage in Sicily for the purpose of financing their military operations and the maintenance of garrisons. The obverse and reverse types of the series are mostly influenced by Sicilian prototypes, particularly those of Syracuse, except for the later series with the head of Herakles on the obverse which was obviously influenced by the well-recognized coinage of Alexander the Great. While a few of the series are struck at cities with established mints, such as Motya and Panormos, these are often viewed as minor or campaign mints that operated for a short duration. The location of the primary Punic mint (or mints) on Sicily, responsible for the large issues studied by G.K. Jenkins (’Carthage’ series I-V), has been the subject of great debate. Most recently I. Lee surveyed the preexisting literature and took a fresh look at the full spectrum of evidence, persuasively concluding that this mint was located at Entella (”Entella: The Silver Coinage of the Campanian Mercenaries and the First Carthaginian Mint 410-409 BC”, NC 2000).