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Naville Numismatics Ltd.
Auction 55  9 Feb 2020
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Lot 39

Starting price: 400 GBP
Price realized: 2900 GBP
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Bruttium, Rhegium Tetradrachm circa 450-445, AR 29.8mm., 17.27g. Lion's head facing. Rev. RECI – NOS Apollo Iocastus seated l. on stool, himation over lower limbs, holding sceptre in r. hand and resting l. on hip; all within laurel wreath. Jameson 452 (these dies). C.C. 34 (these dies). Kraay-Hirmer pl. 98, 282. Herzfelder 1. Historia Numorum Italy 2477.

Attractive cabinet tone, About Very Fine.

Ex Astarte sale 2003

The earliest coinage of Rhegium, a colony at the end of the 'toe' of Italy, was modelled after the coinage of Sicily, as this city's contacts were much stronger with the island across the strait than with its Italian neighbours. This magnificent tetradrachm is a perfect example: its denomination and weight standard were ideal for trade in Sicily, and even its thick fabric and its designs on both sides in relief, would have made it more acceptable in its intended market. Enough praise cannot be showered upon this particular coin, which is a pristine example from the first pair of dies used to strike coins at Rhegium. Though the charm of the series endured, none of the Archaic period dies quite match the quality of this first set, which was the prototype for all that followed. The lion's scalp is a tour de force because of its sublime simplicity; the reverse is both forceful and elegant, and possesses all of the best qualities of late Archaic Greek art. In the late 19th Century Percy Gardner expressed interest in the "...remarkable series of seated male figures, which are artistically of the greatest interest." This included the symbolical bearded figure from the Rhegium tetradrachms, sitting in the attitude of Zeus, and a similar figure on the early coins of Tarentum. He described each of these figures as a Demos of the city, but current studies tend to adopt the view that J. P. Six expressed in the Numismatic Chronicle of 1898, that the figure is Iocastus, the traditional founder of Rhegium. Not only would he be an appropriate subject, but on some examples (Hertzfelder 59-60) a serpent is shown beneath the chair, and the legend holds that Iocastus died from a snake bite.






In addition, winning bids of EEC clients for this coin are subject to a 5% fee on hammer price as a reimbursement for import duty paid to HMRC.

This coin is Not subject to any kind of US import restrictions.
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