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Ira and Larry Goldberg Auctioneers
Auction 96  14-15 February 2017
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Lot 1552

Starting price: 2000 USD
Price realized: 6500 USD
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Sicily, Syracuse. Agathokles. Silver Tetradrachm (16.82 g), 317-289 BC. Ca. 317-310 BC. Wreathed head of Arethusa left, surrounded by three dolphins; below neck, [NK]. Reverse: [Σ]YPAKOΣIΩ[N] in exergue, charioteer, holding goad and reins, driving galloping quadriga left; above, triskeles; in exergue, monogram. Ierardi 50 (O9/R28); SNG Manchester 496 (same dies); SNG ANS 633. Underlying luster present. Extremely Fine. Estimate Value $2,000 - 2,500
From The Herbert & Aphrodite Rubin Collection; Purchased from an uncertain NFA auction in the 1970s-1980s, lot 124.
Agathokles spent much of his early career struggling against the Syracusan oligarchy known as the Six Hundred. Fearing his personal wealth and popularity in the city, the Six Hundred sent him into exile, where he became a skilled mercenary commander. His new military strength and Carthaginian intervention paved the way for his return and appointment by the oligarchs as strategos autokrator ("supreme general"), but in 317/16 BC, he championed the cause of democracy (cynically as it turned out) and overthrew the Six Hundred. This coin was struck in the years following this coup and consciously looks back to older types used in democratic periods at Syracuse as a means of presenting a democratic façade while all real power was increasingly concentrated in the hands of Agathokles.
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