Publication: Monedas de Ptolomeo III a nombre de la ‘Reina Berenice’
Authors
Salgado, Damián R.
item.page.secondaryauthor
item.page.director
Publisher
Murcia: Revista Numismática Hécate
publication.page.editor
publication.page.department
DOI
item.page.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Le monnayage de Ptolemée III Evergète Ier. au nom de Bérénice, traditionnellement
attribué a Bérénice II
Evergète, est ici réattribué, en reprenant la théorie de R. A. Hazzard
(1995) avec la soutenance de nouveaux arguments, á sa sœur Bérénice Syra, femme
d’Antiochos II Theos. Au même temps, l’identification et organisation de deux groupes de
monnaies frappés
au nom de Bérénice (respectivement en étalon attique et lagide) est révisé, les
émissions datés et mises en contexte historique et géographique, montrant que la large pièce
d’argent, proposé comme une dodecadrachme attique par Svoronos (1904) et comme une
pièce
de 15 drachmes d’étalon lagide para Vagi (1999) est vraiment une pièce de 12½ drachmes
attiques
The coinage struck by Ptolemy III Euergetes I in the nam e of Berenice traditionally assigned to Berenice II Euergetis is here reattributed, following the theory introduced by R. A. Hazzard (1995) supported by new arguments, to his sister Berenice Syra, wife of Antiochus II Theos. Also, the identification and or ganisation of two series (one struck in the Attic standard, the other in the local Ptolemaic standard) is reviewed, the issues dated and set in their relevant historical and geographical context, showing also that the largest silver coin minted in name of Berenice and described by Svoronos (1904) as an Attic dodekadrachm, and by Vagi (1999) as a «pentekaidekadrachm» of the local standard, is actually a piece of 12½ Attic silver drachms
The coinage struck by Ptolemy III Euergetes I in the nam e of Berenice traditionally assigned to Berenice II Euergetis is here reattributed, following the theory introduced by R. A. Hazzard (1995) supported by new arguments, to his sister Berenice Syra, wife of Antiochus II Theos. Also, the identification and or ganisation of two series (one struck in the Attic standard, the other in the local Ptolemaic standard) is reviewed, the issues dated and set in their relevant historical and geographical context, showing also that the largest silver coin minted in name of Berenice and described by Svoronos (1904) as an Attic dodekadrachm, and by Vagi (1999) as a «pentekaidekadrachm» of the local standard, is actually a piece of 12½ Attic silver drachms
publication.page.subject
Citation
Revista Numismática Hécate, nº 3, 2016
item.page.embargo
Collections
Ir a Estadísticas
Sin licencia Creative Commons.