Diomedes, Heroic King of Argos
Sale: CNG 79, Lot: 291. Estimate $7500. Closing Date: Wednesday, 17 September 2008. Sold For $5000. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee. |
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ARGOLIS, Argos. Circa 370-350 BC. AR Drachm (5.63 g, 12h). Head of Hera right, wearing stephane ornamented with palmettes and single-pendant earring / Diomedes, nude but for chlamys tied around neck, advancing right, holding dagger and Palladion. BCD Peloponnesos 1068 (this coin); SNG Copenhagen -; BMC 44 var. (control marks); Traité III 625 var. (same). VF, toned, reverse slightly off center. Good metal. Very rare.
Ex BCD Collection (LHS 96, 8 May 2006), lot 1068; Münzen und Medaillen AG 77 (18 September 1992), lot 96.
Diomedes, the heroic king of Argos, was one of the famous Achaeans who fought at Troy. He and the Greater Ajax were considered their second-best warriors, after Achilles. According to Homer’s Iliad, he was a brilliant and courageous fighter, whose zeal in pitched battle led to the wounding of the goddess Aphrodite (Il. 5.330-351). In the non-Homeric stories of Troy, Diomedes, with the help of Odysseus, stole the Palladion from its sanctuary in the Trojan citadel, thereby fulfilling the prophecy that doing so would effect the downfall of Troy (Apollodoros, Epitome 5. 10; Konon, Diegesis 34).
The Palladion (Latin Palladium) was a xoanon, or ancient wooden effigy, of Pallas Athena that had purportedly fallen from heaven. According to Apollodoros (Library 3.12.3), it was fashioned by Athena and named in memory of Pallas, the daughter of Triton, who was accidentally killed while sporting with the goddess. It remained on Olympos until it was cast out of heaven into the countryside around Troy. It was discovered there by Ilos, who enshrined it in his newly founded city of Ilion (Troy), where it remained until the Trojan War.
Following its theft, many legends arose regarding the whereabouts of the Palladion. It was reputed to have remained in the possession of either Diomedes or Odysseus. The Athenians claimed that it was kept in the Erechtheion on the Acropolis and was ritually cleaned in an annual ceremony called the Plyntereia (the Clothes Washing Ceremony). The Roman poet Virgil asserted that the figurine had not been stolen at all, but had been saved by the Trojan hero Aeneas during Troy’s fall, and brought to Italy, where centuries later it was installed in the Temple of Vesta on the Roman Forum. In early Christian times, Clement of Alexandria (Protrepticus 4.46.3) claimed to have personally seen it and described it as "a shapeless, dark piece of wood."