Asia Minor Coins - Photo Gallery

Ancient Greek and Roman coins from Asia Minor


Coin ID #4859

Prymnessos (AD 240-260) AE 24

Imperial Times, mid-3rd century AD. AE24 (7.30g, 7h). Draped bust of King Midas right, wearing Phrygian cap / Dikaiosyne standing left, holding scales and sceptre. Good VF, black-green patina with lighter green overtones, small hairline flan crack. A rare mythological type. Ex Drewry Coll.

Midas, the mytho-historical king of Phrygia and Lydia, was granted the so-called "Golden Touch" by Dionysus because the king wished for unending wealth as a reward for his guest-friendship to Silenus. Everything Midas touched turned to gold, including food. Starving and pleading for relief, the king was instructed to bathe in the waters of the river Pactolus. The water removed Midas’ “gift” and turned the sand of the river-bed into grains of gold. It was the naturally-occuring ore of the Pactolus that became the source of the metal used in the first archaic electrum coinages of Asia Minor.

File information
Filename:721176.jpg
City/Mint name:Prymnessos
Rating (6 votes):22222
Keywords:roman / bronze
References:Hans von Aulock, Phrygiens 955/962 (obv./rev.; same dies); SNG Copenhagen 663 (same dies)
Valuation:CNG Auc. 72 (6/2006), lot 1176 ($1,250 + comm)
Photo courtesy of:Classical Numismatic Group - www.cngcoins.com
Filesize:176 KiB
Date added:Jul 02, 2008
Dimensions:800 x 379 pixels
Displayed:582 times
URL:http://www.asiaminorcoins.com/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=4859
Favorites:Add to Favorites
Add your comment
Anonymous comments are not allowed here. Log in to post your comment