NumisBids
  
Heritage World Coin Auctions
ANA Signature Sale 3048  11 August 2016
View prices realized

Lot 32012

Estimate: 80 000 USD
Price realized: 59 575 USD
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
Ancients
SICILY. Syracuse. Time of Dionysius I (405-367 BC). AR decadrachm (33mm, 43.08 gm, 3h). Reverse die signed by Euainetos, ca. 400 BC. Racing quadriga driven left by charioteer, holding reins and kentron; in field above, Nike flying right to crown him; in exergue, military arms, including aspis (shield), greaves, cuirass, and crested Attic helmet, all joined by horizontal spear, ΑΘΛΑ ("prizes") below / ΣΥ−ΡΑ−ΚΟΣ−ΙΩΝ, head of Arethusa left, hair wreathed in barley ears, wearing triple pendant earring and beaded necklace, four dolphins around, die-engraver's signature [EY]AINE below bottom dolphin. Gallatin 20 (RIV / CIX). SNG ANS 366 (this obverse die). Rare. Deeply struck from dies of highly refined style! NGC AU★ 5/5 - 5/5, Fine Style.Widely considered to be the most beautiful coins ever struck, the immense silver decadrachms of Syracuse from the later fifth century BC represent the full flowering of classical Greek sculptural art. Syracuse, the foremost Greek city in Sicily, had produced coins of exceptional beauty for nearly a century when, ca. 415 BC, engravers began signing their coin dies. Chief among these were the master engravers Kimon and Euainetos, whose large silver decadrachms seemed to capture the spirit of the artistic and intellectual revolution then sweeping the Greek world. The obverse of these pieces depicts a four-horse racing chariot, or quadriga, in full career to left while Nike, goddess of Victory, flies above to crown the driver with a laurel wreath. Below this scene is a set of Greek armor offered as a prize to the victorious charioteer. The reverse depicts a beautiful head of Arethusa, nymph of a sacred spring, with dolphins frolicking around her. This exceptional decadrachm shows the signature of Euainetos (abbreviated EY-AINE) below Arethusa's neck. The decadrachm of Euainetos became a widely-copied archetype for Greek coinage, and the master engraver's head of Arethusa remains a paradigm of cool, classical beauty today.

Estimate: 80000-100000 USD
Question about this auction? Contact Heritage World Coin Auctions