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Property:Remarks

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Showing 20 pages using this property.
0–9
"overstruck on Salamis, c. 411-373 BC (obv.: head of Herakles r.; rev.: ram recumbent right on a dotted line)"  +
"Cet exemplaire est également surfrappé sur un tétradrachme de Timarque: on voit au droit le visage de ce dernier et une partie de la légende BAΣΙΛΕΩΣ ME[ΓAΛOY]"  +
"Bereits mindestens eine Überprägung des Schrötlings zu erkennen; die beiden vorausgegangenen syrakusanischen Prägungen sind als Calciati 80 (Zeus / Pferd) zu identifizieren"  +
"Overstruck on a very rare AR Stater of Paphos by Onasi[...] (see lot 161, below, for type). Undertype clearly visible."  +
"Obv.: below, letters and date (visible on reverse: border of dots; rev.: (visible on obverse: prow of galley left)"  +
" Overstruck on a bronze coin of Arados (BMC 325), dated CY 166 (94/3 BC). "  +
Overstruck on a Corinthian-type stater with Athena’s profile visible on the reverse.  +
"Überprägungsspuren auf Av." (nb: I first gave it to Tiribazus but, putting it in perspective, it fits better with Evagoras at Salamis)  +
"overstruck on an uncertain issue (head of Zeus[?] visible on reverse)"  +
"Obv.: above and below, letters and date (visible on reverse: complete bull, CN, N; rev.: border of dots (visible on obverse)"  +
"overstruck on an Aspendos stater. Until now, this series has been dated to between 479 and 460 BC, primarily because of the particularly late-Archaic-looking head of Athena on the reverse. The present coin requires to revise that chronology since it is definitely overstruck on a stater of Aspendos, dated independently to c. 465 - 430! On the coin's obverse the undertype is that of a helmeted warrior striding to left, holding a spear and shield (traces of the warrior's body are visible on the pomegranate when the coin is inverted); on the reverse are traces of the undertype of a triskeles in an incuse square (one leg is visible on the cheek of Athena). If we accept that the earlier and cruder types of the Aspendian series with the warrior and the triskeles have to be dated to c. 465-440, the coin of Side we have here, which is stylistically very close to all the other known examples of this early type, cannot be dated before 460 BC. Thus we can suggest that this series ought to be dated to 460-450 BC; thus, we have to downdate the beginning of the next period of the coinage of Side."  +
"overstruck on hemilitron of Syracuse, the head of Zeus is visible with brow of Zeus starting at truncation of neck of Sikelia"; "Our coin is struck over a Hemilitron of Syracuse (BMC Sicily 313-318), the head of Zeus right is slightly visible. The inscription below the truncation starts ΙEYΣ [...]".  +
"Overstruck on a Syracusan drachm, Athena/Two dolphins, star (Calciati II pg. 111, 62), with the star and two dolphins visible on the obverse, and the bowl of Athena's helmet visible on the reverse"  +