Ancients
MYSIA. Cyzicus. Ca. 550-500 BC. EL stater (18mm, 15.76 gm). NGC Choice VF★ 5/5 - 4/5, Fine Style. Half-length bust of a winged female deity (a siren?) left, wearing helmet-like headdress, earring and long-sleeved chiton, holding tunny fish in right hand and flower in left / Quadripartite incuse square. Von Fritze 75. SNG France 205. Boston MFA 1448. Very rare, with a highly attractive archaic image!
The winged female depicted on rare Cyzicene staters is variously described as a harpy, a siren, or an early representation of Persephone (the flower suggesting this interpretation). Harpies are described as half-bird, half-woman; Sirens, the mythical offspring of the river-god Alpheus and several of the Muses, are also described as bird-women, but with beautiful voices that drew sailors to their deaths. An early myth suggests sirens received their wings when Demeter sent them off to search for her daughter Persephone; the flower held by this deity might thus suggest the siren interpretation is correct.
HID02901242017
Estimate: 10000-13000 USD