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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Greek Coins| > |Geographic - All Periods| > |Greece| > |Akarnania| > SH67745
Argos Amphilochicum, Akarnania, Greece, 340 - 300 B.C.
|Akarnania|, |Argos| |Amphilochicum,| |Akarnania,| |Greece,| |340| |-| |300| |B.C.|, Amphilochian Argos, on the river Inachus at the eastern extremity of the Ambraciot Gulf, was the chief town of ancient Amphilochia. According to traditions cited by Strabo, it was founded after the Trojan War by Alkmeion or his brother Amphilochos. The rival of Ambrakia Arta in the 5th century B.C., it was allied with Athens at the beginning of the Peloponnesian War. The site of Argos has been a subject of dispute. Thucydides says that it was on the sea. Polybius describes it as distant 33 km, and Livy 35 km from Ambracia. William Martin Leake, writing in the 19th century placed it in the plain of Vlikha, at the modern village of Neokhori, where are the ruins of an ancient city, the walls of which were about 1.6 km in circumference.
SH67745. Silver stater, Pegasi 32; BMC Corinth p. 123, 14; cf. BCD Akarnania 139 (AMΦI); SNG Cop 314 (same), VF, Argos (near Neochori, Epirus, Greece) mint, weight 8.087g, maximum diameter 21.5mm, die axis 45.00o, 340 - 300 B.C.; obverse Pegasos flying left, pointed wings, A below; reverse AMΦIΛ, head of Athena (or Aphrodite) left in plain Corinthian helmet over a leather cap, ABP and spear behind; ex Erez Inc. (Berkely, CA); SOLD










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