A tetradrachm die study of the Macedonian imperial coinage attributed to Berytos by Price establishes that this was a compact, yet complex emission struck from seven obverse dies and at least 43 reverse dies. Based on mint controls and their varied placements, seventeen different types are identified in a sequence that is tightly die linked. Forty percent of the types identified are previously undocumented. The coinage has all the hallmarks of a short duration emission from an ephemeral mint. Influences derived from Arados and Sidon are identified in the diversity of iconographic detail and style. It is inferred that resources were possibly drawn from these mints to strike the coinage. One specific iconographic detail on some of the reverse...
There is practically nothing in the historical sources about his having shown an interest in minting...
A survey of the gold and copper coinages minted at Thessalonica between c. 408 and c. 629 concentrat...
The earliest tetradrachms (Group 1) from the mint of Alexander the Great at Babylon show a rapid pro...
This study makes the case for the reattribution from Byblos to a second mint at Arados (Arados II) o...
The northern Phoenician port city of Karne was responsible for three small, short duration emissions...
This paper details a study of the coinage of Susa struck prior to Seleukos's annexation of the provi...
This study establishes that the die linked tetradrachm issues of SC 118 in the name of Philip III an...
After a brief commissioning period involving the contemporaneous serial striking of coins in each of...
A newly identified Alexandrine tetradrachm type struck from a recycled pair of Philip III dies, recu...
The article briefly discusses the economic and political significance of the Alexander III (“t...
Coinage bearing an anchor symbol and the name of Alexander was struck at the Babylon II mint under S...
The article briefly discusses the economic and political significance of the Alexander III(“the Grea...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 52-59.Alexander I ruled Macedonia between 498/7 and 451 B.C. ...
The history of Hellenistic Bactria (northern Afghanistan, and areas of Tajikistan and Uzbekistan) is...
Texte intégral : http://doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-10-04International audienceAmong other innovations...
There is practically nothing in the historical sources about his having shown an interest in minting...
A survey of the gold and copper coinages minted at Thessalonica between c. 408 and c. 629 concentrat...
The earliest tetradrachms (Group 1) from the mint of Alexander the Great at Babylon show a rapid pro...
This study makes the case for the reattribution from Byblos to a second mint at Arados (Arados II) o...
The northern Phoenician port city of Karne was responsible for three small, short duration emissions...
This paper details a study of the coinage of Susa struck prior to Seleukos's annexation of the provi...
This study establishes that the die linked tetradrachm issues of SC 118 in the name of Philip III an...
After a brief commissioning period involving the contemporaneous serial striking of coins in each of...
A newly identified Alexandrine tetradrachm type struck from a recycled pair of Philip III dies, recu...
The article briefly discusses the economic and political significance of the Alexander III (“t...
Coinage bearing an anchor symbol and the name of Alexander was struck at the Babylon II mint under S...
The article briefly discusses the economic and political significance of the Alexander III(“the Grea...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 52-59.Alexander I ruled Macedonia between 498/7 and 451 B.C. ...
The history of Hellenistic Bactria (northern Afghanistan, and areas of Tajikistan and Uzbekistan) is...
Texte intégral : http://doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-10-04International audienceAmong other innovations...
There is practically nothing in the historical sources about his having shown an interest in minting...
A survey of the gold and copper coinages minted at Thessalonica between c. 408 and c. 629 concentrat...
The earliest tetradrachms (Group 1) from the mint of Alexander the Great at Babylon show a rapid pro...