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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Greek Coins| > |Geographic - All Periods| > |Anatolia| > |Mysia| > |Pergamon| > GB71736
Pergamon, Mysia, c. 133 - 16 B.C.
|Pergamon|, |Pergamon,| |Mysia,| |c.| |133| |-| |16| |B.C.|, When the Pergamene king Attalus III died without an heir in 133 B.C., to prevent a civil war, he bequeathed the kingdom to the Roman Republic. The Greeks and Romans did not view snakes as evil creatures but rather as symbols and tools for healing and fertility. Asclepius, the son of Apollo and Koronis, learned the secrets of keeping death at bay after observing one snake bringing another snake healing herbs. Woman seeking fertility, the sick, and the injured slept in his temples in chambers where non-poisonous snakes were left to crawl on the floor and provide healing.
GB71736. Bronze AE 19, SNG BnF 1815 (with owl countermark); SNG Tüb 2415 (same); BMC Mysia p. 129, 161 (same); SNGvA -; SNG Cop -, F, green patina, small flan, obverse right side flattened by counter-marking, flan crack, Pergamon (Bergama, Turkey) mint, weight 6.107g, maximum diameter 18.7mm, die axis 315o, c. 133 - 16 B.C.; obverse laureate head of Asklepios right; reverse AΣKΛHΠIOY / ΣΩTHPOΣ, Asklepian snake coiled around omphalos, head right; countermark: owl standing right with head facing, in 6mm round punch; SOLD











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