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Heritage Auctions
Central States World Coins & Ancient Coins Signature Auction - Dallas 3083
United States
April 24, 2020
1647 Lots
The auction is now over!
Lot 30093 > EGYPT. Alexandria. Antinoüs. (died AD 130). AE drachm (34mm, 23.29 gm, 12h). NGC VF 4/5 - 4/5. Dated Regnal Year 19 of Hadrian (AD 134/135). ANTINOOY-HPΩOC, draped bust of Antinoüs right, seen from front, wearing hem-hem crown / Antinoüs on horseback right, wearing cloak flying behind, caduceus in right hand; L / IΘ (date) to right and below raised foreleg. Dattari (Savio) 2081-2. Emmet 1346.  Antinoüs was a handsome Bithynian youth whom Hadrian probably noticed on his visit to Bithynium-Claudiopolis in AD 123/4. According to Hadrian's recent biographer Anthony Birley, Antinoüs likely found a
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Lot 93

Lot 30093 > EGYPT. Alexandria. Antinoüs. (died AD 130). AE drachm (34mm, 23.29 gm, 12h). NGC VF 4/5 - 4/5. Dated Regnal Year 19 of Hadrian (AD 134/135). ANTINOOY-HPΩOC, draped bust of Antinoüs right, seen from front, wearing hem-hem crown / Antinoüs on horseback right, wearing cloak flying behind, caduceus in right hand; L / IΘ (date) to right and below raised foreleg. Dattari (Savio) 2081-2. Emmet 1346. Antinoüs was a handsome Bithynian youth whom Hadrian probably noticed on his visit to Bithynium-Claudiopolis in AD 123/4. According to Hadrian's recent biographer Anthony Birley, Antinoüs likely found a "discreet place" in Hadrian's entourage and accompanied the peripatetic emperor on his various journeys. Their relationship came to a mysterious end during Hadrian's visit to Egypt in AD 130. During a barge trip up the Nile, Antinoüs drowned, probably on October 24. In his memoirs, Hadrian insisted the youth's death was an accident, but other historians implied either that Hadrian had killed him in some sacrificial rite, or that Antinoüs had committed ritual suicide to preserve Hadrian's health. Whatever the true story, Hadrian's grief was such that he deified the youth and founded the city of Antinoopolis near the spot of his drowning. The cult of Antinoüs spread rapidly throughout the Greek east, making him the last of the truly popular pagan gods. His sculpted image also became ubiquitous as the very personification of male beauty. Antinoüs is extensively honored on the Roman provincial coinage of the East, particularly in Bithynia and Egypt, but is totally absent from the official Roman coinage.

Category: Ancients
Starting price: 1000 USD

* - 20% buyer's fees are not included in the hammer price

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