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Wildwinds Reference/Ric

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pishpash's Avatar
United Kingdom
3626 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  05:01 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add pishpash to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
I bought a Gallienus Panther which turns out to be "Striped Tigress walking left" as below.

Both descriptions have been given the same RIC 230 number on wildwinds. I can understand that the tigress may have been mistaken for the panther in the past, but as they are two distinct animals, why should they share the same RIC number on wildwinds? I checked RIC it does not mention a tigress.

Why give it an RIC number at all?

Wildwinds-Reference/Ric

Wildwinds-Reference/Ric
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sel_69l's Avatar
Australia
21788 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  05:22 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sel_69l to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Not a bad coin but I have to admit, I can't identify the feline on it. Perhaps that is also the problem that Wildwinds has.

To increase the possibility of a correct decision on the species I would need quite few coins of similar type and the application of brain grease (not elbow grease), and the contemplation of my navel for a while, then guess.
Would help if there was some evidence provided by a contemporary written document to shed more light on the species of feline.
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pishpash's Avatar
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3626 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  06:06 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pishpash to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Wildwinds RIC 230 (tigress) http://www.wildwinds.com/coins/ric/...RIC_0230.jpg

Wildwinds RIC 230 (panther) http://www.wildwinds.com/coins/sear...tml#RIC_0230

Mine is definitely like the tigress example, you can see the stripes on the body of the animal. I just find it odd that it is not listed as "Not in RIC" rather than giving it a number which is already given to something else!
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bobbyhelmet's Avatar
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2838 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  06:48 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobbyhelmet to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
If you've not already seen it this is a good site:

http://www.lunalucifera.com/Zoo/liber.html

Must admit I'm a bit skeptical, individual celetor styles could pretty easily account for all the slight differences. Also how easy would it have been for a die cutter to get a panther or tigress anatomically correct back then. An overall description of 'big cat' may be better.

Very attractive reverse on yours pishpash, love the cat whatever it is
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pishpash's Avatar
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3626 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  07:11 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pishpash to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Bobby, great site, no I had not seen it before. Really interesting stuff!
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Masis's Avatar
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946 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  6:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Masis to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I would not fret over this Ann.
It depicts a Tigress, since it clearly shows Stripes.

It is not a Celator error.

The Romans had access to Tigers at that time, as the Caspian Tiger still existed.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caspian_tiger

As the name suggests, they mostly inhabited the region south of the Caspian Sea, such as the "Hyrcanian Mountains".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alborz

Not surprisingly, like most large Beasts that had the misfortune to live in regions the Romans conquered, they became rare.
Wildwinds-Reference/Ric
http://www.livius.org/cn-cs/constan...mosaics.html

The Tiger is associated with the God, Bacchus.
Wildwinds-Reference/Ric
http://www.britishmuseum.org/resear...697&partId=1

Checking "Van Meter" he states it is a Panther and this issue of coin invokes the God Liber against the revolt of Aureolus, in 268 A.D.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aureolus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liber
Edited by Masis
10/10/2013 6:34 pm
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pishpash's Avatar
United Kingdom
3626 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  6:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pishpash to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thanks Masis, no longer fretting!
Bobby's link was really helpful, not seen that site before.

If we are going to get really picky, wildwinds example of a panther looks more like a cheetah to me

http://www.wildwinds.com/coins/sear/s2978.3.jpg
Valued Member
United States
61 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  7:18 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add rasiel to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
How can you tell those are stripes? I think it would be an impossible task for even the most talented engraver to represent in relief differences in color and contrast. The logical thing would be to presume that that's, you know, a rib cage and teats. In all cases I'd say these are panthers.

Ras
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pishpash's Avatar
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 Posted 10/10/2013  7:27 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pishpash to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Rasiel, the stripes go up the neck as well as on the body, so not just on the ribcage. The celator did pretty will with my coin. Have a look at the link that BobbyHelmet posted.
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Masis's Avatar
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946 Posts
 Posted 10/10/2013  7:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Masis to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Or it could be a Panther that is really emaciated and its skin is creased.
Not really a type of powerful symbol an Emperor would want to show to the public.

Reading on the God, Liber:
"His cult and functions were increasingly associated with Romanised forms of Greek Bacchus and Dionysus, whose mythologies he came to share."

Bacchus is just the Roman version of the Greek Dionysos.

As shown in the mosaic of Bacchus riding on a Tiger, it shows that Liber was associated with Bacchus, and so the Tiger would be associated also with Liber.

Dionysus seems to more often be depicted riding a Leopard.
Wildwinds-Reference/Ric
http://www.lookandlearn.com/history...ysius+M
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pishpash's Avatar
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 Posted 10/10/2013  8:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pishpash to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Strange that all the "stripy" panthers have teats. Anything symbolic about a tigress rather than a tiger?
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Masis's Avatar
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 Posted 10/10/2013  8:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Masis to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
As to a Tigress per se, I have not read any mention of Bacchus riding only a Tigress but that:

"Bacchus was euhemerised as a wandering hero, conqueror and founder of cities. In some Roman sources, the ritual procession of Bacchus in a tiger-drawn chariot, surrounded by Maenads, Satyrs and drunks, commemorates the God's triumphant return from the conquest of India."
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 Posted 10/11/2013  02:49 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobbyhelmet to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Just to chuck a bit more mud in these waters a 'panther' is usually just a black leopard although black jaguars and cougars are also often known as 'panthers'.

The Panthera genus derives from latin and includes the tiger, the lion, the jaguar, and the leopard. Calling them all 'panthers' is not necessarily incorrect but also not fully correct.

I suspect the writers of RIC either didn't notice the variants (if there are any, still not convinced) or noticed and didn't care so just lumped them under one number. This hobby is full of details like this that one finds amazing and another not. Who is to say who is correct. The Zoo coins are great to collect
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pishpash's Avatar
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3626 Posts
 Posted 10/11/2013  05:10 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add pishpash to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I am happy to record my coin as a tigress, but I will also note that there is some controversy on the subject. Thanks for all the comments.
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Masis's Avatar
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946 Posts
 Posted 10/11/2013  10:31 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Masis to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Just to chuck a bit more mud in these waters a 'panther' is usually just a black leopard although black jaguars and cougars are also often known as 'panthers'.~bobbyhelmet


I was pondering this as well.
To us "English-English" speakers, a Panther is a "black" Leopard. Period.

Ancient Mariner Conspiracy Theories aside, I doubt the Romans had access to the "black" Jaguars of South America.

Knowing now that Liber became associated with Bacchus, and Bacchus was depicted being driven in a Chariot by Tigers or riding a Tiger, then for this issue of coin the description of Tiger is more apt.

Ann's example is a Very Fine example since it depicts the Tigress properly.

Below are two examples I bought last year, and the quality is typical of the Antoninianii struck in Gallienus' sole rule. Poor.

However the Teats are noticeable on both examples.

So if most of the issues were poor, then fine details such as Stripes would not be bothered with or engraved properly into the Die.
So we have a big, descriptionless Cat.
Unless of course we look into the meaning of the reverse legend, Liber etc etc.

Thank's to Ann's example I will now revise the descriptions for my two examples from "Panther (Black Leopard)" to the more appropriate description of Tigress.

Wildwinds-Reference/Ric

Wildwinds-Reference/Ric
Edited by Masis
10/11/2013 1:23 pm
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chrsmat71's Avatar
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4973 Posts
 Posted 10/11/2013  11:01 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add chrsmat71 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
whichever cat that is, the surfaces on that coin are very nice. pretty!
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