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Auction 26  21 May 2023
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Lot 414

Estimate: 350 CHF
Price realized: 320 CHF
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AEOLIS. Aigai. Circa 480-450 BC. Hemiobol (Silver, 6.5 mm, 0.21 g). Goat's head to right, with long beard and a long, curving horn. Rev. Quadripartite incuse square. Cf. AMNG p. 138, 24, Imhoof-Blumer, Monnaies Grecques, p. 110, 180, and SNG Oxford 2232 (all obols of the same type but of slightly earlier date). Extremely rare, unpublished save for its auction appearance, and with a goat's head of fine, Classical style. Some surface roughness, otherwise, nearly extremely fine.
From the "Collection sans Pareille" of Ancient Greek Fractions, ex Hauck & Aufhäuser 14, 6 October 1998, 115.

There is a big problem with anepigraphic ancient Greek silver coins of the late 6th and 5th centuries BC, which bear goats as their primary type. Not only are there quite a number of coin-issuing cities that have the name Goat Town (Aigai and its variants: among other places they are in central Macedonia, on the Chalkidike, in Achaea, in Aeolis, in Cilicia, et al.), but other places, and peoples, used the goat as a coin type as well. Thus, coins that were confidently ascribed to a specific Aigai beginning in the late 19th century, have now been placed elsewhere. The bulk of types from Northern Greece are now assigned to tribal groups (the Mygdones and Krestones for example), but others, as those here, have been reattributed thanks to the evidence of findspots. Thus, the city of Aige in the Chalkidike has recently been assigned a number of coins that were previously considered to either be of uncertain origin or were located elsewhere; this is thanks solely to the clear evidence of recorded provenience.
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