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Source Description
The obverse of this silver tetradrachm shows an eagle, standing in profile to the left. Around the body of the eagle, the name of the city of Akragas, Sicily (modern Agrigento) is written in boustrophedon, that is, with lines written in different directions and with reversed letters. Above the eagle, the letters AKRAC are written from right to left; the word “wraps” under the eagle, where the letters ANTOΣ appear in mirror image (transliteration: "Akragantos"; translation: "Of Akragas"). On the reverse of the coin, a naturalistically rendered crab is shown with its claws extended and eight legs carefully articulated. The shell of the crab additionally has what appears to be a face on its back, possibly representing the eponymous city god “Akragas.” The fresh-water river crab was employed on the coins of the city of Akragas as the city’s symbol to show the city’s dominance over land and sea. Greek poleis (city states) often adopted a symbol such as a plant or animal that was closely associated with the city and often appeared on their coinage. The eagle and the crab were both important symbols for Akragas. Later 5th century BCE coins of the city often had more elaborate depictions of the animals, with hunting eagles holding a hare and the crab in combination with other sea life, such as octopi, prawns, clams, and even merpeople.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
102753
label
Tetradrachm of Akragas
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
102753
sourceUrl
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Tetradrachm of Akragas
description
The obverse of this silver tetradrachm shows an eagle, standing in profile to the left. Around the body of the eagle, the name of the city of Akragas, Sicily (modern Agrigento) is written in boustrophedon, that is, with lines written in different directions and with reversed letters. Above the eagle, the letters AKRAC are written from right to left; the word “wraps” under the eagle, where the letters ANTOΣ appear in mirror image (transliteration: "Akragantos"; translation: "Of Akragas"). On the reverse of the coin, a naturalistically rendered crab is shown with its claws extended and eight legs carefully articulated. The shell of the crab additionally has what appears to be a face on its back, possibly representing the eponymous city god “Akragas.” The fresh-water river crab was employed on the coins of the city of Akragas as the city’s symbol to show the city’s dominance over land and sea. Greek poleis (city states) often adopted a symbol such as a plant or animal that was closely associated with the city and often appeared on their coinage. The eagle and the crab were both important symbols for Akragas. Later 5th century BCE coins of the city often had more elaborate depictions of the animals, with hunting eagles holding a hare and the crab in combination with other sea life, such as octopi, prawns, clams, and even merpeople.
provenance
Sale, Ars Classica XV, Geneva, 2 July 1930, p. 17, lot 268, pl. 9; Richard Cyril Lockett, London, 1930, by purchase [SNG Lockett 692]; Sale, Richard Cyril Lockett Collection II, Glendining and Co., LTD, London, 25 October 1955, p. 74, lot 576, pl. 20; Private Collection, New York, by purchase; Sale, Triton XXV, New York, 11 January 2022, lot 55; Walters Art Museum, 2022, by purchase.
date
ca. 465-440 BCE (Classical)
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
coins
largeImageUrl
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Diam: 1 1/16 in.; Weight: 0.04 lb. (2.7 cm, 17.33 g)
Source extras
cul
Greek
inscriptions
[Inscription
Greek; in boustrophedon with second line reversed] AKRAC/ANTOΣ; [Transliteration] Akragantos; [Translation] Of Akragas
med
silver
creator_ids
6256
collection_ids
GRC
NUM
exhibition_ids
none
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
107761be3aff1116