NumisBids
  
Roma Numismatics Ltd
Auction X  27 September 2015
View prices realized

Lot 155

Estimate: 3750 GBP
Lot unsold
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
Sicily, Gela AR Tetradrachm. Circa 480-475 BC. Bearded charioteer, holding reins with both hands, driving walking quadriga to right; above, Nike flying to right, crowning horses with wreath / Forepart of man-headed bull right, CEΛAΣ around. Jenkins, Gela 104, 15; SNG ANS 22; Randazzo 19; SNG Oxford 1727 (all same dies). 17.21g, 25mm, 9h.

Extremely Fine.

Ex Roma Numismatics VI, 29 September 2013, lot 369.

The city of Gela was jointly founded by colonists from Crete and Lindos, Rhodes, 45 years after the foundation of Syracuse, around 688 BC. The city took its name from the nearby river, which itself was given the appellation Gela on account of the icy coldness of its waters, the word gela meaning 'ice' in the languages of the Opici and Siculi, as it does in Latin.

Virgil applies the epithet 'immanis' to Gela, which some believe is in reference to the river, others the city. The latter is more correct, and is an allusion to the horned, man-headed bull depicted on their coinage which is a personification of the river Gela itself. This image of the river-god is derived from that of Achelous, the 'father of all rivers'.

Those who apply the epithet to the river make it signify 'cruel' or 'monstrous', and consider this a reference to the number of perilous whirlpools in its waters, whence Ovid remarks 'Et te vorticibus non adeunde Gela' (Fasti, 4, 470) - 'And you, Gela, whose whirlpools must not be approached'.
Question about this auction? Contact Roma Numismatics Ltd