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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Greek Coins| > |Hellenistic Monarchies| > |Seleucid Kingdom| > GY67025
Seleukid Kingdom, Tetrapolis of Seleukeia, Syria, c. 148 - 147 B.C.
|Seleucid| |Kingdom|, |Seleukid| |Kingdom,| |Tetrapolis| |of| |Seleukeia,| |Syria,| |c.| |148| |-| |147| |B.C.|, As a young boy, Demetrius II fled to Crete after the death of his father, his mother and his older brother, when Alexander Balas usurped the Seleucid throne. A few years later, about the time this coin was struck, Demetrius II returned to Syria, and with the backing of Ptolemy VI of Egypt, regained his father's throne. Alexander fled to the Nabateans who, anxious to stay on good terms with Egypt, cut off his head. The people of Syria had little respect for the young boy. This coin was struck, without any recognition of Demetrius' authority, in the name of the brother cities - Antioch, Apameia, Laodikeia and Seleukeia.
GY67025. Bronze AE 21, SNG Munchen 578; SNG Cop 397; BMC Galatia p. 252, 6 (Antioch), Choice VF, Seleuceia Pieria mint, weight 7.719g, maximum diameter 21.3mm, die axis 45o, 148 - 147 B.C.; obverse laureate head of Zeus right, border of dots; reverse thunderbolt, AΔΕΛΦΩN ΔΗMΩN (of the brother cities) above and below, ΕΞP (Seleucid Era year 165) and monogram above, monogram below, all within laurel wreath; nice image of Zeus!; rare; SOLD




  






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