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Research Coins: Feature Auction

 
Sale: Triton VIII, Lot: 541. Estimate $5000. 
Closing Date: Monday, 10 January 2005. 
Sold For $6250. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

SELEUKID KINGS of SYRIA. Antiochos IV Epiphanes. 175-164 BC. AR Tetradrachm (16.73 gm, 12h). Antioch mint. Struck circa 166 BC. Laureate head of Apollo right / BASILEWS ANTIOCOU QEOU EPIPHANOUS NIKHFOROU, Apollo standing right, holding phiale in right hand, lyre in left arm. SNG Spaer -; Le Rider, Antioche 561 (A57'/P394 - this coin); Mørkholm 24 (A55/P -); SMA 64; Houghton 111 (same obverse die). Good VF, lightly toned, overstruck with traces of a border of dots visible below Apollo's feet. Very rare. ($5000)

Ex Harlan J. Berk 97 (12 August 1997), lot 206.

Antiochos IV (Epiphanes), third and youngest son of Antiochos the Great, was born about 215 BC. Following the battle of Magnesia in 189, the young prince was sent as a hostage to Rome and was thus unable to play an active role in Seleukid politics throughout the reign of his elder brother, Seleukos IV. In 175 Seleukos was murdered by his minister Heliodoros, who attempted to install on the Syrian throne Antiochos, the 5-year-old younger son of the late king. An elder son, Demetrios, had only recently been sent to Rome as a hostage in place of his uncle Antiochos who was on his way back to Syria at the time of his brother's murder. Antiochos now saw his opportunity to seize power in Syria, and he hastened to Antioch where he overthrew Heliodoros and ascended the throne of his ancestors. The new king soon showed that he was no traditionalist, replacing the time-honored reverse type of seated Apollo on the Seleukid coinage with an enthroned figure of Zeus Nikephoros, and adopting the grandiose and provocative title “God Manifest”. Rome was forced to intervene when he led a series of invasions of Egypt between 170 and 168 BC, and Antiochos was obliged to withdraw, though he claimed a great victory. The following year he had to face a serious Jewish revolt led by Judas Maccabaeus, the result of a tactless policy of hellenization. This issue was still unresolved at the time of his sudden death while on campaign in Persis during the winter of 165/4 BC. The coinage of Epiphanes' reign is of great interest and marks a turning point in the iconography of Seleukid numismatics. This very rare Apollo standing type might be regarded as a short-lived experimental coinage, connected to the traditional dynastic type, but in a novel rendition reflecting Antiochos' new conception of the monarchy.