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Research Coins: Electronic Auction

 
346, Lot: 12. Estimate $100.
Sold for $65. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

THRACE, Chersonesos. Circa 386-338 BC. AR Hemidrachm (13mm, 2.32 g). Forepart of lion right, head reverted / Quadripartite incuse square with alternating raised and sunken quarters; pellet to left of E and grain ear in opposite sunken quarters. BMC –; McClean 4101; Weber 2429; SNG Copenhagen –. Good VF, small test cut on edge.


Like many other Greek city-states, the city of Chersonesos was built on a site from which it could exploit the military or economic advantages of its location. Located on a peninsula extending from Europe into the Aegean on the west and the Dardanelles on the east, its name derives from the ancient Greek word for peninsula. Little is known about this city, apart from its coinage. Two cities grew up nearby. Of the one, Agora (Malagra?), little is known. The other, called Kallipolis, or “Beautiful City,” was made famous, first as the first foothold of the Ottoman advance into Europe, and later as Gallipoli, the site of the famous ANZAC invasion of 1916.

Both these issues and the roughly contemporary hemidrachms of Parion in Mysia are routinely found with small test cuts on the edge, placed by merchants to ensure that the coin was not plated.