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Collecting Post-Alexander coins

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Peattie:
Carthage was not involved in any conflict with Alexander despite the attempt by Tyre to get the Carthagians to assist them when Alexander attacked and destroyed their mother city in 332 B.C, they were sympathetic to Tyre but were heavily involved in Syracuse around the same time, so did not send help.

Apparently Alexander had plans to attack Carthage and had even started building a fleet but that was as far as it got with his untimely death. So no Carthage was not drawn into Alexanders wars.

Reid Goldsborough:
Every numismatist writing in depth about Alexander the Great over the past half century agrees that there's no proof or convincing evidence that he put his own portrait on his coins. The portrait is that of Herakles, clearly, since in the majority of cases it's the very same portrait that appeared on other Macedonian coins before Alexander, including those before he was born. The picture gets a bit muddier with some of Alexander's lifetime issues, such as those from Babylon, that appear to incorporate some of what are likely Alexander's facial features on the Herakles portrait, such as his fierce gaze. But this was probably done unofficially by mint magistrates or die engravors, not through an official directive from Alexander, as it's far from universal. The picture is complicated further by the fact that in ancient times, particularly after Alexander's death, it's likely that at least in some cases people regarded the Herakles portrait on Alexander-type silver coinage as that of Alexander himself, given subsequent coinage. But it clearly wasn't intended that way with the majority of his lifetime coinage, on which the posthumous coinage was based. The first portrait of Alexande the Great to appear on standard circulating coins appeared on that of his successors, Ptolemy I, Lysimachos (the most beautifully rendered portrait), and possibly Seleukos I (scholars differ on this). Other portraits of Alexander the Great appeared later on Aesillas tetradrachms and Koinon of Macedonian bronzes and on other less voluminous coinage as well.

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