Ancient Greece - AR Tetrobol - "Histiaea". Circa 340-330 BC

Denomination: AR Tetrobol                                                                   

Date: 340-330 BC

Mint:  Euboea , Ancient Greece                                                                                      

Mount: 18K gold

Description: EUBOEA. Histiaea. Obverse: Head of nymph right, wearing vine-leaf crown, earring and necklace / IΣTI-AIEΩN, Reverse: Nymph Histiaea seated right on winged galley stern, stylis (mast with cross-piece) in left hand.

History: These beautiful silver coins from ancient Greece depict the head of the lovely nymph Histiaia. These coins were struck in the important city of Histiaia, named after the nymph who was the favorite local goddess. Histiaia was found on the Greek island of Euboia, which was a large island off mainland Greece in the Aegean Sea. The City of Histiaia did not begin to produce coinage until the mid-4th century BCE. From its extensive silver issues in the Hellenistic age, it would appear to have been a place of considerable commercial importance.

Histia may imply the origins of the word ‘hysteria’, as everywhere she went, people would laugh, dance, have fun. She was one of the Maenads, a special type of nymph, who were companions of Dionysus and were celebrated for their infamous orgiastic debaucheries, ecstatic singing and dancing. The vine-wreath on this coin recalls their drunken revelry, while the reverse refers to the naval prowess of the city.

ID14692

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