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Leu Numismatik AG
Auction 6  23 Oct 2020
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Lot 59

Estimate: 5000 CHF
Price realized: 11 000 CHF
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SICILY. Gela. Circa 490/85-480/75 BC. Didrachm (Silver, 20 mm, 8.73 g, 6 h). Nude bearded warrior riding horse to right, brandishing spear in his right hand and holding reins in his left. Rev. CEΛA Forepart of the river-god Gelas, in the form of a man-headed bull, to right. Jameson 582 (same dies). Jenkins, Gela, 11 (O6'/R5). A magnificent piece, very sharply struck on both sides and undoubtedly among the finest known. Very minor scratch on the obverse, otherwise, good extremely fine.


From the Kleinkunst Collection, ex Triton I, 2-3 December 1997, 204.

The nude warrior on horseback on the earliest coinage of Gela refers to the importance of the aristocratic cavalry in Sicily: unlike the mountainous Greek motherland, the south and east of the island formed ideal pastures for horses, and cavalry hence played a much more important role in warfare. This brought along significant political consequences, as the breeding of warhorses was expensive and thus in the hands of an elite class of landowners that dominated the Sicilian cities - differing, quite significantly, from the Greek mainland, where hoplite warfare was a major factor in the evolution of the Spartan state in the Archaic time and the rise of the Athenian democracy in the late 6th and 5th centuries. In late Archaic Gela in particular, the aristocratic cavalry shaped the political landscape: the tyrant Hippokrates (whose name literally means 'horse power'!) conquered considerable parts of eastern Sicily with a force of horsemen in 505-491 BC. He was succeeded by his senior cavalry officer Gelon, who, after the conquest of Syracuse, became the dominant political figure in Magna Graecia and gained immortal fame for repelling the great Carthaginian attack on the western Greeks in 480 BC.
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