Texte intégral : http://doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-10-04International audienceAmong other innovations in coinage, the portrait tetradrachms of Eumenes II testify to the interest that the Attalid king showed in coinage. It is difficult to date these coins using purely numismatic criteria. The generally favoured late dating is based on the notion that this was a short-lived coinage, but it may well have been struck – possibly at intervals – over a relatively long period of Eumenes II’s reign. In this paper I defend an early dating for the starting point of this coinage, in the first half of the reign and even in the first years, before the Treaty of Apamea. The historical context of the rising power of Rome in the Eastern Mediterranean after t...
The earliest tetradrachms (Group 1) from the mint of Alexander the Great at Babylon show a rapid pro...
This study examines how the Roman emperors c. AD. 260–295 attempt at maintaining their power-bases t...
(in English) The work deals with the latest development in a period of Roman coinage, which stands o...
Texte intégral : http://doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-10-04International audienceAmong other innovations...
This paper details a study of the coinage of Susa struck prior to Seleukos's annexation of the provi...
The northern Phoenician port city of Karne was responsible for three small, short duration emissions...
The paper presents an overview of the figurative themes of Greek coinage with the aim of identifying...
Gerin Dominique. Otto Mørkholm †, Early Hellenistic Coinage, from the accession of Alexander to the ...
During the principate of Augustus Caesar, a series of asses (RIC I2 Augustus 390–396) were minted be...
The coinage issued by Mark Antony in the East is a powerful, contemporary witness to the triumvir’s ...
This article presents the first die study of the coinage of the koinon of Athena Ilias, the evidence...
In this paper are examined two small denominations in the name of Philip II, notably the Heracles / ...
International audienceThis paper focuses on the numismatic evidence for an analysis of the formal ic...
There is practically nothing in the historical sources about his having shown an interest in minting...
The earliest tetradrachms (Group 1) from the mint of Alexander the Great at Babylon show a rapid pro...
This study examines how the Roman emperors c. AD. 260–295 attempt at maintaining their power-bases t...
(in English) The work deals with the latest development in a period of Roman coinage, which stands o...
Texte intégral : http://doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-10-04International audienceAmong other innovations...
This paper details a study of the coinage of Susa struck prior to Seleukos's annexation of the provi...
The northern Phoenician port city of Karne was responsible for three small, short duration emissions...
The paper presents an overview of the figurative themes of Greek coinage with the aim of identifying...
Gerin Dominique. Otto Mørkholm †, Early Hellenistic Coinage, from the accession of Alexander to the ...
During the principate of Augustus Caesar, a series of asses (RIC I2 Augustus 390–396) were minted be...
The coinage issued by Mark Antony in the East is a powerful, contemporary witness to the triumvir’s ...
This article presents the first die study of the coinage of the koinon of Athena Ilias, the evidence...
In this paper are examined two small denominations in the name of Philip II, notably the Heracles / ...
International audienceThis paper focuses on the numismatic evidence for an analysis of the formal ic...
There is practically nothing in the historical sources about his having shown an interest in minting...
The earliest tetradrachms (Group 1) from the mint of Alexander the Great at Babylon show a rapid pro...
This study examines how the Roman emperors c. AD. 260–295 attempt at maintaining their power-bases t...
(in English) The work deals with the latest development in a period of Roman coinage, which stands o...