Alexander the Great Silver Drachm

£ 425.00

An extremely fine Ancient Greek silver drachm, featuring to the obverse the depiction of Alexander the Great as young Herakles, portrayed in profile wearing the lion’ skin headdress. The reverse displays the Greek god Zeus Aëtophoros portrayed bare chested and regally seated on a throne. The deity appears holding an eagle and a long sceptre. The deity is flanked to the right side by Greek letters forming the word ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟY, meaning Of Alexander. The reverse displays a mintmark to the left of the throne, a monogram resembling letter H.

Date: 323-319 BC
Condition: Very good condition. The portrait is clear. Some wear to the reverse.
SKU: GS-141 Categories: , Tags: , ,

The Greek drachma (ελληνική δραχμή) was the name given to the currency of Ancient Greece. It takes its name from the drachma, the ancient unit of measurement used in many Greek city-states and in many Middle Eastern kingdoms of the Hellenistic period. Alexander the Great was the legendary king of the Hellenistic Kingdom of Macedon. Born in 356 BC, he succeeded his father, Philip II, when he was just 20 years old. In just 10 years from his ascension to the throne, he built one of the largest empires of the Ancient World, as his kingdom stretched from the Adriatic Sea to the Indus River. He died in Babylon, which he intended to make the capital of his empire, in 323 BC, at just 33 years of age.

Weight 4.25 g
Dimensions W 1.6 cm
Greek & Hellenistic Rulers

Alexander the Great

Greek Mythology

Herakles, Zeus

Region

Southern Europe

Reference: For a similar item, The British Museum, item 1911,0704.72

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