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Olympus Numismatics UG
Auction 3  20 May 2023
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Lot 275

Starting price: 200 EUR
Price realized: 360 EUR
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Greek
MYSIA. Kyzikos. (Circa 334 BC).
EL Myshemihekte (6.3mm 0.66g)
Obv: Eleutheria seated left on rock inscribed EΛEY ΘEPIA in two lines, holding wreath in right hand; tunny left below
Rev: Quadripartite incuse square.
Gorny & Mosch 152, 1380; otherwise unpublished in this denomination.
Extremely Rare, perhaps the third known example of this historically interesting type in this denomination. Of the hundreds of known types seen on the coinage of Kyzikos, this is the only one to bear an inscription - EΛEΥ ΘEPIΑ, meaning Freedom

This specimen bears an inscription, 'Eleutheria" (Freedom), that makes clear the intent of the type: to celebrate a liberation. Several different victories have been suggested, but the presence of a coin of this type in the Prinkipo Hoard, buried circa 334 BC, in conjunction with gold staters of Philip II, clearly suggests that the victory in question is Alexander's first defeat of the Persians at the river Granikos in 334 BC. The Granikos was located just to the south and west of Kyzikos, and Alexander's victory liberated Kyzikos from Persian control. Thus, not only is this a very rare stater from Kyzikos, it also represents the first coin struck as a direct result of Alexander's campaign to conquer the world, predating even Alexander's own coinage.
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