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Rare Phanes 1/24 Stater

893380. Sold For $1450

IONIA, Ephesos. Phanes. Circa 625-600 BC. EL 1/24 Stater (7mm, 0.68 g). Forepart of stag left, head right; three pellets to left / Incuse square punch with raised lines within. CNG E249, lot 135; Triton XI, lot 233; Triton X, lot 287; Triton VIII, lot 405; CNG 69, lot 390 (all from the same obv. die); otherwise unpublished in the standard references. VF. Rare.


Ex Gorny & Mosch 186 (8 March 2010), lot 1375.

The celebrated coins of Phanes are known to be among the earliest of Greek coins, for a hemihekte of the issue was found in the famous foundation deposit of the temple of Artemis at Ephesos. It is this find spot, along with the design of the grazing stag (an animal associated with Artemis), that has suggested Ephesos as the mint. As presently known, the Phanes coinage consists of seven denominations, from stater down to 1/96 stater, with some denominations occurring in different varieties (the stag facing in different directions and sometimes associated with the symbol of a pentagram or a triad of pellets). Only the two largest denominations bear the name of Phanes. The three known staters carry the legend ΦANEOΣ EMI ΣHMA (or similar) (“I am the badge of Phanes”), and the seven known trites (third staters) bear just the name ΦANEOΣ. The use of a personal name at this early point in the development of coinage is instructive. We know from these coins that the responsibility for the issue was personal – whether the issuer was an official or a private individual – rather than collective (the citizenry as a whole). Despite the absence of a legend on the smaller denominations, the whole series is linked beyond doubt by the consistent type of the stag, by the common weight standard, and by the occasional use of the same reverse punch on different denominations within the series.