Academic literature on the topic 'Macedonian Numismatics'

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Journal articles on the topic "Macedonian Numismatics"

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Solovieva, Aleksandra. "The origins of the myth about the Argead dynasty." ΣΧΟΛΗ. Ancient Philosophy and the Classical Tradition 16, no. 1 (2021): 218–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/1995-4328-2022-16-1-218-230.

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The article is devoted to the question of how the legend about the emergence of the Argead dynasty was formed. The work examines written ancient sources, as well as numismatics, which are associated with the legend of the appearance of the Argead dynasty. The author draws attention to the similarity of the Scythian, Thracian and Macedonian iconography of coins, as well as to the similarity of the evidence of the written tradition when describing the founding of dynasties. The author comes to the conclusion about the possible Thracian and Scythian influence on the formation of the myth about the origin of the Argeads.
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Murray, Sheanna. "Identities in Roman Macedonia during the Early Imperial Period." Sapiens ubique civis 1, no. 1 (December 1, 2020): 141–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/suc.2020.1.141-160.

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This paper focuses on the impact of the Roman presence in Macedonia on the collective identities of the local population from the beginning of Roman rule in the region in 167 BC until the early 3rd century AD. The societal changes taking place during the first three and a half centuries have been outlined using the available epigraphic, numismatic and onomastic evidence to analyse the evolving identities of the Macedonians and the new forms of expression of these identities. The approach taken in this paper is not one of Hellenisation or Romanisation but of acculturation, focussing on the identities of the Macedonian people that adapted and evolved in relation to the new political and cultural environment.
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ANTONIADOU, MARIA. "The “Serres, 1966” Hoard: A Contribution to the Coinage of the Macedonian Koinon." Karanos. Bulletin of Ancient Macedonian Studies 6 (December 11, 2023): 41–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5565/rev/karanos.89.

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Studies on the institutions of the Macedonian Koinon have expanded considerably in recent years since excavations in the region of Macedonia revealed a significant amount of numismatic and epigraphic evidence. Even though literary sources concerning the foundation and the existence of the Koinon are obscure, numismatic testimonies contributed to the institution and its role within the Macedonian territory under the Roman rule. In the current article, the “Serres, 1966” hoard is examined, which was found in 1966 and is today kept at the Thessaloniki Archaeological Museum. Emphasis is given to the iconographic types and the legends, which provide valuable information regarding the institutional and cultural character of the Macedonian Koinon.
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AKAMATİS, Nikos, Asterios VASILAS, and Christos VASILAS. "The numismatic circulation of the cities of Chalcidice, the Chalcidic League, and the Bottiaeans in the kingdom of Macedonia during the 5th and 4th centuries BC." Gephyra 24 (November 15, 2022): 39–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.37095/gephyra.1097262.

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In this article the presence of coins from the mints of the Chalcidice within the boundaries of the Macedonian kingdom is examined. Along with coin hoards, we include archaeological material from various sites to understand and interpret the existence of coins of the cities of Chalcidice, the Chalcidic League, and the Bottiaeans within the Macedonian kingdom. After the final conclusions, a group of bronze coins from the excavations of Pella is published as an appendix. Coins from mints of the Chalcidice that have been found in the Macedonian kingdom are few. So far, most coins (37) can be attributed to the Chalcidic League, another 3 to the Bottiaeans, and 4 to the Chalcidic League or the Bottiaeans. Second comes Acanthus with 16 coins, and third Potidaia with 12. Further, 7 coins can be attributed to Aphytis, 5 to Mende, 4 to Scione and 1-2 issues to Aineia, Dikaia and possibly Sermyle. Finally, Ouranopolis is represented with 3 coins. Most of these coins came to light in excavations in burial and non-burial contexts, and some also were buried in coin hoards. The earliest of these issues are dated in the first half of the 5th century BC. The number of coins rises slightly in the second half of the 5th century coins, while most of the numismatic material belongs to the first half of the 4th century BC. Finally, rather few are the coins of the second half of the 4th century BC. Most of the coins and coin hoards of the first half of the 4th century BC can probably be linked to the invasion of the army of the Chalcidic League into Macedonia. People traveling from Chalcidice to Macedonia are another source.
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Hatzopoulos, Miltiade B. "Une nouvelle fête macédonienne dans une inscription de Kibyra." Tekmeria 16 (October 25, 2021): 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/tekmeria.28431.

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An early second century BC fragmentary inscription from Kibyra in honour of a local athlete mentions among others two victories won at festivals whichwere presided by “king Philip”, who can be no other than Philip V. The first festival was the Erotideia at a city the name of which has been lost. The second one was the Herakleia at a city in Macedonia, the name of which is not preserved. The author of the present article argues that the rst city was Thespiai in Boiotia, and that the second one was Beroia. He bases his argument on an epigram by Chrysogonos from the Anthologia Palatina explained in 1934 by Charles Edson, who on literary and numismatic evidence submitted that the Antigonids hailed from Beroia. Several inscriptions discovered locally since then leave no doubt that Herakles Kynagidas was the principal divinity of that city. Going a step further, the author connects the festival Herakleia with a list of victors from various parts of the Greek world, found at Beroia, which was known from the time of Alfred Delacoulonche, but had remained uninterpreted. A diagramma of Philip V from Amphipolis offers fresh evidence on the rules under which foreign athletes participated in Macedonian festivals.
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SHASHLOVA, T. YU. "The Sinopian Embassy to Darius III." Ancient World and Archaeology 18 (2017): 304–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/0320-961x-2017-18-304-316.

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The article deals with the messages of Arrian and Q. Curtius Rufus about the Sinopeʼs embassy sent to Darius III during the Macedonian invasion. After the death of the Persian King, the ambassadors together with the Greek mercenaries, which were at Darius, surrendered to Alexander the Great (Arr. Anab. III.24.4; Curt. VI.5.6–10). The purposes and circumstances of sending embassy in sources don't reveal. However, a number of numismatic data suggest that Sinop had some relation to the Persian counteroffensive that unfolded in Asia Minor after the Battle of Issus (Curt. IV.1.34–35; Diod. XVII.48.5–6). Most likely, sending embassy by this city to Darius III should be connected with these events.
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Sprawski, Sławomir. "The Temenidae, Who Came Out of Argos. Literary Sources and Numismatic Evidence on the Macedonian Dynastic Traditions / Temenidzi, którzy przybyli z Argos. Macedońskie tradycje dynastyczne w źródłach literackich i świadectwach numizmatycznych." Notae Numismaticae - Zapiski Numizmatyczne, no. 16 (May 20, 2022): 13–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.52800/nn/16/a1.

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The prevailing opinion is that, at least from Alexander I onwards, Macedonian rulers attached a lot of importance to the tradition of their Argive origin. There are also suggestions that various images placed on royal coins refer to the mythical founder of the dynasty and his foreign origin. But a review of these images does not provide convincing arguments to justify the above-mentioned opinion. The preserved fragments of poetry dedicated to Alexander I seem to speak rather in favor of his interest in the Trojan myth. If the Argive origin of the royal family is so strongly emphasized by Herodotus, Thucydides, and Euripides, then perhaps the “establishment” of the genealogical ties of the Macedonian kings with Temenidae of Argos took place in Athens. The Greek authors presented the Macedonian rulers with versions of the mythical past of their family linked to Greek tradition. But there is not much to indicate that the predecessors of Alexander the Great attached particular importance to them.
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Marcellesi, Marie-Christine. "Power and coinage. The portrait tetradrachms of Eumenes II." Opuscula. Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome 10 (November 2017): 94–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-10-04.

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Among other innovations in coinage, the portrait tetradrachms of Eumenes II testify to the interest that the Attalid king showed in coinage. It is difficult to date these coins using purely numismatic criteria. The generally favoured late dating is based on the notion that this was a short-lived coinage, but it may well have been struck – possibly at intervals – over a relatively long period of Eumenes II’s reign. In this paper I defend an early dating for the starting point of this coinage, in the first half of the reign and even in the first years, before the Treaty of Apamea. The historical context of the rising power of Rome in the Eastern Mediterranean after the Second Macedonian War may explain the original features of this coinage and its iconography, which shows a will to affirm a personal power and also suggests a connection with Rome through the Pergamene cult of the Kabeiroi.
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Taylor, Lloyd W. H. "A Philip III Tetradrachm Die Pair Recycled by Seleukos I." KOINON: The International Journal of Classical Numismatic Studies 1 (January 1, 2018): 39–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/k.v1i.1157.

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A newly identified Alexandrine tetradrachm type struck from a recycled pair of Philip III dies, recut to include the anchor insignia and name of Seleukos, is to be added to the corpus of Babylonia Uncertain Mint 6A (Opis). It represents a new series in the mint’s output, Series V(a), that is closely allied to, but preceding Series V in the name of Seleukos. It is distinguished from the latter by the presence of the anchor symbol and the archaized depiction of Zeus. It precedes the decision to eliminate the anchor insignia from coinage of Uncertain Mint 6A and thus must be amongst the first, if not the first coin type to bear the name of Seleukos, die linked as it is to the last of the issues in the name Philip III Arrhidaios, the last of the Macedonian pure blood Argead line. Considered in the context of other die links between different series in the corpus of Babylonian Uncertain Mint 6A, this die link has a ritual character, in effect a numismatic statement of the legitimacy of Seleukos as the successor to Philip III Arrhidaios.
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Sprawski, Sławomir. "The Temenidae, Who Came Out of Argos. Literary Sources and Numismatic Evidence on the Macedonian Dynastic Traditions / Temenidzi, którzy przybyli z Argos. Macedońskie tradycje dynastyczne w źródłach literackich i świadectwach numizmatycznych." Notae Numismaticae - Zapiski Numizmatyczne, no. 16 (May 20, 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.52800/ajst.1.16.a1.

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The prevailing opinion is that, at least from Alexander I onwards, Macedonian rulers attached a lot of importance to the tradition of their Argive origin. There are also suggestions that various images placed on royal coins refer to the mythical founder of the dynasty and his foreign origin. But a review of these images does not provide convincing arguments to justify the above-mentioned opinion. The preserved fragments of poetry dedicated to Alexander I seem to speak rather in favor of his interest in the Trojan myth. If the Argive origin of the royal family is so strongly emphasized by Herodotus, Thucydides, and Euripides, then perhaps the “establishment” of the genealogical ties of the Macedonian kings with Temenidae of Argos took place in Athens. The Greek authors presented the Macedonian rulers with versions of the mythical past of their family linked to Greek tradition. But there is not much to indicate that the predecessors of Alexander the Great attached particular importance to them.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Macedonian Numismatics"

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Kosmidou, E. "A methodological essay in numismatic iconography : arms and armour on Macedonian coinages (5th c. BC)." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2013. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1396234/.

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This is a methodological study that uses representations of arms and armour on coins of Alexander I and Perdikkas II as case studies in order to assess the value of visual analysis in numismatics. Each coinage is examined in three parts: a review of production dates for coins precedes a typological analysis of depicted arms and armour, which is then used in a critical investigation of potential meanings within current theoretical discourses. Context is a key variable in the creation of meaning and the understanding of relevant coin types bears heavily upon the circumstances of their production and use. Hence, secure production dates are first established in order to construct robust links between iconographic content and context. The next step focuses on a systematic classification of arms and armour within coin series and an evaluation of their representational value, which take account of links between military equipment in use and its pictorial counterparts on coins. Degrees of iconographic accuracy are identified and compositional elements of the depicted weaponry are analysed. The latter process embraces current controversies about the structure or use of certain pieces of weaponry. During the final step interpretations of representations are proposed after an investigation of potential meanings, which military themes or individual arms and armour may have had if specific connotations or general values were attached to them. This is achieved by comparing military, social and political conditions with coin data and inferring causal explanations of their choice, meaning and function. Through this process, an agenda of key issues about coin and weaponry types is set, which involves the testing of former approaches and formulation of new ones with observed data in view.
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Books on the topic "Macedonian Numismatics"

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Andrew, Burnett, Wartenberg Ute, and Witschonke Richard, eds. Coins of Macedonia and Rome: Essays in honour of Charles Hersh. London: Spink, 1998.

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Kondijanov, Jovan. Numizmatička zbirka na Narodna banka na Republika Makedonija =: Numismatic collection of the National Bank of the Republic of Macedonia. Skopje: National Bank of the Republic of Macedonia, 1999.

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Bauslaugh, Robert A. Silver coinage with the types of Aesillas the Quaestor. New York: American Numismatic Society, 2001.

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Money in Ptolemaic Egypt: From the Macedonian Conquest to the End of the Third Century BC. Cambridge University Press, 2007.

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Studies in the Macedonian Coinage of Alexander the Great (Numismatic Studies). Amer Numismatic Society, 1997.

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Macedonia 2: Alexander I-Philip II (American Numismatic Society: Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum, 8). American Numismatic Society, 1994.

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Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum the Collection of the American Numismatic Society Pt. 7: Macedonia I : Cities (Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum). American Numismatic Society, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Macedonian Numismatics"

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Dahmen, Karsten. "The Numismatic Evidence." In A Companion to Ancient Macedonia, 41–62. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781444327519.ch3.

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Bauslaugh, R. A. "RECONSTRUCTING THE CIRCULATION OF ROMAN COINAGE IN FIRST CENTURY B.C. MACEDONIA." In Numismatic Archaeology/Archaeological Numismatics, 118–29. Oxbow Books, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh1dm95.16.

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Wheatley, Pat, and Charlotte Dunn. "A New Anabasis?" In Demetrius the Besieger, 359–76. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198836049.003.0024.

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Demetrius Poliorcetes returned from Athens to Macedonia, where at last he prepared a campaign that aimed at recovering the former Macedonian Empire. It is clear from the evidence that Demetrius was preparing for an ambitious campaign on a grand scale. However, during these preparations he was also forced to deal with his tenuous hold over his current possessions, especially the attitudes of the dissatisfied Macedonian citizens who were not entirely supportive of Demetrius’ grandiose plans. This chapter contains a discussion of the numismatic evidence, which illuminates both the extensive nature of these plans and changes in political strategy during these years.
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Meadows, Andrew. "Money, Freedom, And Empire In The Hellenistic World." In Money And Its Uses In The Ancient Greek World, 53–65. Oxford University PressOxford, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199240128.003.0005.

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Abstract Martin tackled head-on the relationship between king and subjects, coinage and sovereignty, in the classical Greek world. Taking as his focus the coinage of Thessaly before, during, and after the Macedonian conquest in the fourth century BC, he found no evi dence for the subjection of the region to the Macedonian kings having had any effect on the ability of the Thessalians to produce coin. In a summary review of the other coinages of Greece at the same rime he perceived a similar pattern. His conclusion was unequivocal: ‘It is my contention that the numismatic, historical, documentary, and literary evidence uniformly fails to support the idea that there was operative in rhe classical Greek world a strongly tt’lt connection between an abstract notion of sovereignty and rhe right of coinage which implied the necessity to enforce a uniform monetary circulation.’2 Such a conclusion, if correct, is of fundamental importance for two reasons: first, for our appre ciation of rhe abstract concept or concepts of sovereigntyi and the place of coin issue in the rhetoric of imperialism in the Greek world; and, second, for the practical numismatic purpose of dating many coinages of ancient Greek states. Among numismatists, as well as historians working in all periods of Greek history, it has been common to invoke what Martin has dubbed the lex Seyrig, a “law’ which dictates that no state issued coin in its own name if it was ruled by another.
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Archibald, Z. H. "Epilogue: An Early Hellenistic Kingdom." In The Odrysian Kingdom Of Thrace, 304–16. Oxford University PressOxford, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198150473.003.0014.

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Abstract With The Annexation Of Thrace To Macedon comes a distinct change in the nature of the sources. The tension created by rival Athenian and Macedonian claims for the possession of key sites disappears and with it a wealth of documentary evidence. This is compensated for by a series of inscriptions and archaeological and numismatic finds. In the planned city of Seuthopolis we have direct confirmation of the new Odrysian line founded by Seuthes III and ample evidence of urban sophistication on many levels.
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Akamatis, Nikos. "Numismatic Circulation in the Macedonian Kingdom. The Case of Pella." In Les monnaies de fouille du monde grec (VIe-Ier s. a.C.), 177–201. Ausonius Éditions, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.ausonius.19476.

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Kremydi, Sophia, and Katerina Chryssanthaki-Nagle. "Aigeai and Amphipolis: Numismatic Circulation in two Major Macedonian Cities." In Les monnaies de fouille du monde grec (VIe-Ier s. a.C.), 157–76. Ausonius Éditions, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.ausonius.19461.

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Wheatley, Pat, and Charlotte Dunn. "The Young Demetrius Poliorcetes." In Demetrius the Besieger, 9–26. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198836049.003.0002.

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Demetrius Poliorcetes was born in Macedonia, but grew up at Celaenae in central Phrygia with his parents, the great general Antigonus Monophthalmus (‘the One-Eyed’) and Stratonice, and his extended family. This chapter discusses aspects of Demetrius’ childhood and upbringing, the family structure, and the political context in which Demetrius was raised. Literary sources such as the ancient author Plutarch, who wrote a biography of Demetrius, describe him as being a tall and strikingly handsome individual. In this chapter, the iconographic and numismatic evidence is discussed, and these representations of the king confirm the impression conveyed to us through the ancient sources.
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"Macedonians, Seleucids, Bactrians, Greeks: Histrionics as History on the Hellenistic Fringe." In New Perspectives in Seleucid History, Archaeology and Numismatics, 458–65. De Gruyter, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110283846-025.

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