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Electronic Auction 549

Lot nuber 84

MYSIA, Gambrion. Gorgion. Circa 400 BC. AR Diobol (10.5mm, 1.63 g, 6h). Good VF.


Electronic Auction 549
Lot: 84.
 Estimated: $ 200

Greek, Silver

Sold For $ 225. This amount does not include the buyer’s fee.

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MYSIA, Gambrion. Gorgion. Circa 400 BC. AR Diobol (10.5mm, 1.63 g, 6h). Laureate head of Apollo right / Forepart of bull butting right, head facing, tamgha on shoulder; kerykeion above. Cf. SNG BN 895 var. = Traité II 47 var. = J.-P. Six, "Monnaies grecques, inédites et incertaines" in NC 1894, p. 315, n. 1 (tetrobol; name of Gorgion above bull); cf. Winterthur 2527 (same); Leu Numismatik Web Auction 11, lot 812. Toned, porous. Good VF. Extremely rare, one of only two known diobols of this variety.

From the Tiny Art Collection.

Gorgion was a son of Gongylos the Eretrian, who, in 475 BC, had been awarded by the Persian King Xerxes I a number of cities of Mysia in return for his betrayal of the Greeks during the Persian Wars (Diod. 11.44). After his father's death (circa 425 BC?), Gorgion was given the towns of Gambrion and Palægambrion, while his brother, Gongylos II, received Myrina and Grynion (Xen. Hell. 3.1.6). The brothers joined the Spartan general Thimbron when he arrived in the region to support the Ionians against the Persian Tissaphernes, but they disappear from the historical record thereafter. The coins of Gorgion are only known from Gambrion, and are exceedingly rare. The present and CNG 87 pieces appear to be a new variety with a kerykeion above the bull, and the family tamgha is in the die, rather than added as a punch (as on the Paris coin). [Note: CNG 97, lot 513, is another with these types, but is a subsequent civic issue with part of the city ethnic barely visible in the field. Pecunem 8, lot 150, is an example of this type in Gorgion’s name, like SNG BN 895.]

Closing Date and Time: 1 November 2023 at 10:27:40 ET.

All winning bids are subject to a 20% buyer’s fee.