26 Centuries of Gold
155-145 BC Magnesia

Obverse:

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Reverse:

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Coin Details

Origin/Country: ANCIENT - GREEK CIVIC (7th CENT BC - 1st CENT AD) IONIA, MAGNESIA c.mid-2nd Century BC
Item Description: AV Stater Ionia, Magnesia rv Nike in biga obv Artemis
Full Grade: NGC AU Strike: 4/5 Surface: 4/5
Owner: deposito

Set Details

Custom Sets: 26 Centuries of Gold
Competitive Sets: This coin is not competing in any sets.
Research: NGC Coin Price Guide

Owner Comments:

IONIA. Magnesia ad Maeandrum. Ca. mid-2nd century BC. AV stater (19mm, 8.47 gm, 12h). NGC AU 4/5 - 4/5. Ca. 155-145 BC, Euphemus and Pausanius, magistrates. Draped bust of Artemis right, wearing stephane, hair gathered into knot at back of head, quiver and bow over shoulder / ΜΑΓΝΗΤΩΝ, Nike driving biga galloping right, kentron in right hand, reins in left; ΕΥΦΗΜΟΣ below horses, ΠΑΥΣΑΝΙΟΥ below ground line. BMC Ionia -. SNG Von Aulock -. SNG Copenhagen

Very rare and important, part of the first and only gold emission of Magnesia known. Some die rust on the obverse, otherwise, good very fine.

For a discussion of this newly emerged issue, see the note in Classical Numismatic Group 106, 13 September 2017, 376. The cataloguer is surely right in arguing that the date given in the Heritage (and, just published, Roma XIV) catalogue, circa 155-145 BC, is too early and that the emission belongs to the early years of the establishment of the Roman province of Asia. It is tempting to connect the reverse, highly unusual as it is for an autonomous issue, to a military campaign such as the Roman bellum asiaticum against Aristonikos in 133-129 BC, but we do not know if Magnesia, which had been granted autonomy by the Romans in the Treaty of Apamea, played any significant role during the revolt or not. The establishment of peace after such a devastating war would, however, certainly have been an appropriate occasion for a 'Festemission' in gold. Another possibility is to connect the issue to the sanctuary of Artemis Leukophryena and to interpret the reverse as a reference to the Leukophryeneia, the local games. The fact that an inscription of 112/1 BC mentions an Euphemos, son of Pausanias, as a neokoros of the temple of Artemis Leukophryena may support this assumption, but this argument should not be overstretched: the sanctuary would likely have played a role in possible celebrations of the ending of the bellum asiaticum or a different, unknown military campaign, too, and it is also highly unlikely that this Euphemos, son of Pausanias, the homonymous magistrate of the Magnesian Stephanophoric tetradrachms of circa 155-145 and the one on our stater are all the same person. Not only do they span a time frame of several decades, but the tetradrachms also mention a Pausanias, son of Pausanias, and a Pausanias, son of Euphemos. This confusing situation results from the common Greek habit of naming first-born sons after their paternal and second-born sons after their maternal grandfathers. Since this is not the place to reconstruct a family tree, we may simply conclude from the numismatic and epigraphic evidence that this family played an important role in Magnesia in the second half of the 2nd century. The background of the present, highly unusual emission of Magnesian gold staters therefore remains unclear for the time being and only further research and new finds can shed light on its production.


One of 69 certified by NGC as of April 10, 2024. 117 sales reported in ACsearch including this one as of April 10, 2024, the first appearing in August of 2017 and described then by Heritage as "unique". For the first couple years these appeared at auction they hammered for $17,000 and dropping from there to the high $3,000s these days. Probably a fair number of those 117 appearances in ACsearch are the same coin auctioned over again in the last 6-7 years.

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