Search


CNG Bidding Platform

Information

Products and Services



Research Coins: Electronic Auction

 
244, Lot: 306. Estimate $100.
Sold for $410. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

MACEDON, Koinon of Macedon. Pseudo-autonomous issue. Time of Gordian III, AD 238-244. Æ (26mm, 11.04 g, 1h). Diademed head of Alexander III right / Alexander on Bucephalas right. AMNG III 445 (same obv. die as pl. iv, 12); SNG Copenhagen 1356 var. VF, dark green patina.


Bucephalas, the pride and joy of Alexander the Great, was a magnificent black stallion with a white blaze on his forehead. Originally, Phillip II was going to purchase the horse for himself, but finding it too unmanageable, he made a wager with his son that if he could tame and ride the horse he could keep it. Alexander, noticing that Bucephalas was afraid of his own shadow, turned the steed into the sun. As his shadow now fell behind him, Bucephalas was quickly calmed and Alexander was able to ride him. From that day, Bucephalas carried Alexander into most of his victorious battles. When the horse finally died in 326, Alexander had a state funeral for him and built a city in India where he died, naming it Bucephala.