NumisBids
  
Numismatica Ars Classica
Auction 138  18-19 May 2023
View prices realized

  • View video
Lot 28

Estimate: 40 000 CHF
Price realized: 85 000 CHF
Find similar lots
Share this lot: Share by Email
Siris and Pyxus.
Stater circa 540-510, AR 8.07 g. ΣIΡI / NOΣ retrograde in archaic characters below and above the exergual line Bull walking l., looking backwards. Rev. ΠVX retrograde The same type r. in incuse. Traité 2083 (this obverse die). AMB 165 (these dies). SNG Copenhagen 1387 (these dies). Mangieri, RIN 1981, A1 (this coin). Gorini 1 (these dies). Historia Numorum Italy 1723.
Very rare and in exceptional condition for the issue, undoubtedly among the finest
specimens known. Perfectly struck and centred on a full flan and with a superb
iridescent tone. Good extremely fine

Ex Hess-Leu sale 16 April 1957, Hirsch, 38. From an Exceptional Collection assembled between the early 70s and late 90s. This nomos bears witness to the alliance between "Sirinos" and "Pyx" (the two legends appear engraved in the centre of the obverse of the coin and in the lower quadrant on the reverse respectively). The word "Sirinos" was thought at one time to be the adjective relating to Siri, the city on the Ionian coast which was well known for its wealth and which was destroyed by the coalition of Sybaris, Metapontum and Croton in the years 570-560. Paola Zancani Montuoro, however, believes that the word in question is a noun and, for a variety of reasons, argues that a city called "Sirinos" (of the Sirini, a population from Lucania of which Pliny the Elder speaks in his "Naturalis historia" III 15, 97) existed and was situated about 30 km from Policastro. It has probably been identified in the ruins of a vast inhabited area on a rocky peak which stretches along the valley of Lauria near Rivello and which is still known as "The City". Policastro Bussentino is the modern name for "Pyx" (Pyxoes), the ancient Lucanian city (on the eponymous bay of Tirreno, now known as the gulf of Policastro, in the province of Salerno). The alliance of the two cities, based on commerce, testifies to Pixunte's importance for Sybari's commercial activity in the VI century (bear in mind that literary sources date its foundation by Micitus to 471). The bull looking backwards, and the coin's weight, are typical of Sybaritic coins.
Question about this auction? Contact Numismatica Ars Classica