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Research Coins: Feature Auction

 
Sale: Triton IX, Lot: 845. Estimate $10000. 
Closing Date: Monday, 9 January 2006. 
Sold For $9500. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

TAURIC CHERSONESOS. Pantikapaion. Circa 340-325 BC. AV Stater (9.04 g, 11h). Bearded head of Pan left, wearing wreath of ivy leaves / P-A-N, griffin standing left, head facing, on stalk of wheat, holding spear in mouth. MacDonald 54 (same obv. die as illustration); Anokhin 109; SNG BM Black Sea 864 = BMC 7; SNG Stancomb 547; SNG Copenhagen -; Weber 2690; Dewing 1241-2. Good VF, flan a little wavy, minor edge marks. ($10,000)

antikapaion was founded by Greek colonists from Miletos in the late seventhth century BC. Situated on the west side of the Cimmerian Bosporos, in what is now the Crimea, it achieved great prosperity through its exploitation of the abundant fisheries of the Straits and the export of wheat from the Crimea. This wealth is attested by its splendid gold coinage which commenced in the mid-4th century BC and by the magnificently furnished rock tombs of its principal citizens in the same period. Later, it was to become a regional capital of the kingdom of Mithradates VI of Pontos (120-63 BC) and later still the seat of the kings of Bosporos (first century BC - fourth century AD). The coinage of Pantikapaion seems to have commenced with silver issues in the latter part of the fifth century BC, but it is for its beautiful gold staters that the mint is chiefly noted. They depict the head of the god Pan (a pun on the name of the city) and on the reverse the griffin which Herodotos describes as being the guardian of the remote sources of gold.