Velia, Silver Drachm

1024.jpg

Dublin Core

Title

Velia, Silver Drachm

Subject

Velia, Lucania (Italy), Silver Drachm, 535-510 BCE. OBVERSE: Forepart of a lion right with frontal head seen from above, tearing at a stag’s leg.
REVERSE: Incuse broken square without dividing lines.

Description

Herodotus accounts the adventures of the Phocaians, a people from the area of Turkey who were displaced by the spread of the Persian kingdom. These people (Hist. 1. 167) settled in an area they named Hyele, on the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea, around 538 BCE. It went through several changes of name: Hyele to Ele, to Elea and eventually settling on its Roman name Velia.

The lion and incuse square resemble other coins found in the Aegean world, where the Phocaians had come from. The odd shape, rough design and incuse mark are all examples of early Greek coins.

Source

Gift of James and Aneta McIntyre, Hallie Ford Museum of Art, Salem, OR. 2006.010.024

Date

535-510 BCE

Rights

Hallie Ford Museum of Art

Format

1.600 cm
3.800 gr

Type

Coin

Coverage

This item can be viewed on Hallie Ford Museum of Art's website.

Citation

“Velia, Silver Drachm,” Hallie Ford Museum of Art Exhibits, accessed September 22, 2024, https://library.willamette.edu/hfma/omeka/items/show/76.

Geolocation