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   View Categories Home > Catalog > |Greek Coins| > |Geographic - All Periods| > |Anatolia| > |Ionia| > |Magnesia ad Meandrum| > GA93007
Persian Achaemenid Empire, Magnesia ad Maeandrum, Ionia, Archepolis, c. 459 - 412 B.C.
|Magnesia| |ad| |Meandrum|, |Persian| |Achaemenid| |Empire,| |Magnesia| |ad| |Maeandrum,| |Ionia,| |Archepolis,| |c.| |459| |-| |412| |B.C.|, Archeptolis was a satrap of Magnesia on the Maeander, Ionia for the Persian Achaemenid Empire, c. 459 to 412 B.C. He succeeded his father, the Athenian general Themistocles, and the rule of this father and son has been called "a Greek dynasty in the Persian Empire." Archeptolis is said to have married his half-sister Mnesiptolema (daughter of Themistocles from his second wife). Archeptolis had several sisters and three brothers. One brother, Cleophantus, was possibly the ruler of Lampsacus. Pausanias later wrote that the sons of Themistocles returned to Athens where they dedicated a painting of Themistocles in the Parthenon and erected a bronze statue to Artemis Leucophryene, the goddess of Magnesia, on the Acropolis. They may have returned from Ionia in old age, after 412 B.C., when the Persians took firm control of the Greek cities of Asia. They may have been expelled by the Achaemenid satrap Tissaphernes sometime between 412 and 399 B.C.
GA93007. Silver tetartemorion, apparently unpublished in this denomination but more than 20 specimens known from auctions, cf. Nollé-Wenninger 2A (trihemiobol), aVF, struck with worn/damaged dies, Ionia, Magnesia ad Maeandrum (near Tekin, Turkey) mint, weight 0.219g, maximum diameter 6.26mm, die axis 270o, c. 459 - 412 B.C.; obverse diademed and bearded male head right; reverse eagle flying right within linear square border within incuse square; rare; SOLD










REFERENCES|

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