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Research Coins: Feature Auction

 
Sale: Triton VIII, Lot: 240. Estimate $7500. 
Closing Date: Monday, 10 January 2005. 
Sold For $8500. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

THRACE, Ainos. Circa 474/3-449/8 BC. AR Tetradrachm (15.95 gm, 8h). Struck circa 455/4-453/2 BC. Head of Hermes right, wearing close-fitting petasos ornamented with a row of beads / AIN-I, goat standing right; to right, cult-figure of Hermes Perpheraios standing on throne facing right, caduceus on arm of throne, wreath draped on back of throne; all within incuse square. May, Ainos, Group XV, 71 (A45/P54); Von Fritze, Ainos pl. I, 5 (this coin); AMNG II 260; BMC Thrace pg. 77, 3; SNG Copenhagen -; SNG Fitzwilliam 1652 (same dies); Winterthur 1148 (same dies). Good VF, toned, even light porosity. ($7500)

From the William and Louise Fielder Collection.

Von Fritze cites his plate coin to the H. Weber Collection, but this coin does not appear in the Weber catalog. Also, May incorrectly lists the von Fritze plate coin as example 71c, which is actually the Winterthur specimen (see Winterthur 1148).

THE COINAGE of AINOS

Ainos came rather late to currency production, striking its first tetradrachms only after the expulsion of the Persians from northern Greece following Xerxes’ defeat at Salamis. Its first period ended with the Athenian coinage decree of 449 BC, but the mint was in operation again by circa 435 BC, tapering off rapidly until disappearing with the conquest of the city by Philip of Macedon in 342 BC. Its uniform types throughout its history were Hermes and the goat, the latter the symbol of the pasture land that provided what prosperity Ainos had. Hermes was the patron deity of Ainos, dating from the time of the Trojan War. According to a poem by Kallimachos, the sculptor Epeios, who constructed the Trojan Horse, also made a wooden statue (xoanon) of Hermes, which was washed out to sea and recovered by fishermen by the Hebros river. The fishermen, thinking it just a piece of driftwood, tried to burn it in their bonfire. When it failed to burn they took fright and threw it back into the sea, which promptly cast it back again. The natives accepted it as a relic of the gods, and erected the sanctuary of Hermes Perpheraios (the Wanderer) at the future site of Ainos. The later coins of Ainos, with their splendid facing head of Hermes, showcase some of the finest numismatic art of the Greek world. Nevertheless, Ainos never became an important city or trading center. The climate might have had something to do with it; according to Athaneus, Ainos had two seasons, eight months of cold and four months of winter. At least the goats liked it.