Numismatic and History Discussion Forums > Celtic, Barbaric & Tribal Imitative Coins Discussion Forum

Celtic Alexander Tetradrachm

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Kilian O:
Good evening,

Picked this coin up and was wondering if someone could tell me something more about it. It's imitating an Alexander issue from Memphis. I very often see Philip II tets but I havn't had any luck finding alexander ones. Would these be minted by the same danubian celts that minted the Philip II?

Appreciate any input, thanks!

Kilian

Joe Sermarini:
I don't have any wisdom to share, but I like the coin!

Altamura:
Yes, there also have been imitations of Alexander tetradrachms by the "celtic" peoples of the Balcans:
https://www.acsearch.info/search.html?term=alexander+zeus++tetradra*++imit*&category=1-2&lot=&thesaurus=1&images=1&en=1&de=1&fr=1&it=1&es=1&ot=1&currency=usd&order=1

Partially these coins have their own style and can be attributet with some certainty to certain regions, but I'm not familiar enough with this topic to know more  :(.

Regards

Altamura

djmacdo:
In addition to western and eastern Celtic imitations, imitations were also made in the eastern provinces of the Seleucid empire.  This may be one of the eastern imitations, which remain too little known and studied.

Anaximander:
Nice coin!  Long ago, I picked up one such "barbarous" Alexander III tetradrachm from the Lower Danube (here) and another of Phillip III from the "Carpathian" region (here).  I still don't know much about those issues.

Martin Price lists several examples of the Memphis type, #3970-3971 in the British Museum Collection. The device on the reverse lower left is a rose.  He also lists 44 "barbarous" examples, Plates CLI to CLIII, but none having a Memphis prototype like yours. 

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