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Smack Down Xv- Theamata- The 7 Wonders Of The Ancient World.

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Ancientnoob's Avatar
United States
5155 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  01:17 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add Ancientnoob to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Theamata- the sights, the things to see, later to be referred to as a 'wonder'. the guide of the Ancient Traveler,
In this Smackdown we take tour of the cities made famous in Antiquity for their magnificent feats of innovation, architecture and engineering. Over the centuries their have been many lists, in this case we will use the most current list of 7.
Based largely on the list contrived by Antipater of Sidon c. BC 140.
The list is as follows...

The Temple of Artemis @ EPHESUS
The Great Pyramid @ GIZA
The Colossus @ RHODES
The Hanging Gardens @ BABYLON
The Lighthouse @ ALEXANDRIA
The Statue of Zeus @ OLYMPIA
The Mausoleum of Maussollos @ HALICARNASSUS




The coin can be of any metal and struck at any point in the history of that city
The wonder does not need to be standing at the time the coin was circulated.
The coin needs to be minted or attributed to that specific WONDER CITY.

Smack down format as follows...
1) At most (2) two entries per member.
2) Voting: Vote for three in order of preference, Gold (4pts), Silver (2pts), Bronze (1pt).
3) Host computes the vote totals and announces the winner. Host may enter, but cannot be the winner. Winner chooses next Smackdown subject and is the next host.
4) You do not have to enter a coin to vote but please do try to enter something.
5) Base your votes on any criteria you like
6) Final decision if two pairs have the same score and the same number of golds will be the hosts choice.
7) Enjoy.


Entries Begin Immediately and submissions end at Saturday September 15 at 11:00 pm US Eastern time and voting will last two days and end at 11:00 pm EST USA, Monday September 17, 2012.




Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.
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Ancientnoob's Avatar
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5155 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  03:12 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ancientnoob to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
My two examples...

Coin# 1
Persia, Satrap of Caria,Halicarnassus
AR 23.6mm Tetradrachm (13.63g)
Maussollos 377-353 BC
Obverse: 3/4 facing head of Apollo
Reverse: Zeus? / Ba'al? Standing Right with Labrandus (Double Headed Axe) MAYSSOLL?

REF: SNG Cop 590

Coin# 2
Rhodes
AR Didrachm (6.64g)
387-304 BC
Obverse: 3/4 facing head of Helios
Reverse: Hibiscus (ROSE) Monogram E


Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.
Valued Member
Canada
472 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  07:07 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dionysos to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Father of Mausolus, struck in Halicarnassus :

Satraps of Caria, Hekatomnos AR Tetradrachm
(392-376 BC)
Obv.: Zeus Labraundos holding labrys over shoulder and spear.
Rev.: Lion crouching.
SNG Kayhan 868-9.

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Struck in the years when the Colossus was detroyed (226 BC) :

Islands of Caria, Rhodes AR Tetradrachm
(229-205 BC). Tharsytas, magistrate.
Obv.: Radiate head of Helios facing slightly right.
Rev.: Rose with bud to right; to left, eagle standing right on torch.
Ashton 215. SNG Keckman 550.

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.
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stevex6's Avatar
3352 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  07:25 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add stevex6 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
=> a few very nice coins right off the bat!

... Batman, your first coin is extremely cool!!




Hmmmm? ... hopefully I'll be able to find two coins that meet the qualifications!!

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 Posted 09/13/2012  07:34 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add dougsmit to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The only common items will be Alexandria. There are coins showing the lighthouse but those are not common. Someone please show a Giza. A question: If these wonders were so wonderful, why were so few coins issued showing them?
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stevex6's Avatar
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 Posted 09/13/2012  08:07 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add stevex6 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
stevex6 Coin #1
Rhodes AR Hemidrachm
Date: 408-390 BC
Diameter: 13.0 mm
Weight: 1.7 grams
Obverse: Head of Helios facing
Reverse: Rose in incuse square
Characteristics: Rare early issue
Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.
Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

NOTE => here is a previous thread associated with this particular coin
https://goccf.com/t/126261



stevex6 Coin #2
Carinus Potin Tetradrachm
Alexandria Mint
Date: Year 2 (283-284 AD)
Diameter: 18.9 mm
Weight: 7.3 grams
Obverse: Laureate bust of Carinus
Reverse: Eagle between standards
Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.
Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

NOTE => here is a previous thread associated with this particular coin
https://goccf.com/t/121568
Edited by stevex6
09/13/2012 5:57 pm
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Sap's Avatar
Australia
16867 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  09:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
A question: If these wonders were so wonderful, why were so few coins issued showing them?

Partly because ancient coins served as propaganda tools, depicting the great deeds of the people that struck the coins. The Wonders, for the most part, were built by "other people who lived long ago", which the coin-issuing later owners of the Wonders were reluctant to take credit for.

And partly because by the time the list of Antipater was compiled, 3 out of 7 of the Wonders were already crumbling into ruins: the Colossus barely lasted a generation, the Hanging Gardens (if they ever actually existed - there has never been any archaeological proof) did not survive the collapse of the Neo-Babylonian civilization, and the Great Pyramid, though still standing and with most of the outer casing stones still intact back then, was so old and mysterious that nobody really knew for sure what it was actually built for.

Do you know when the very first Egyptian coins to ever depict the pyramids was struck? 1984. That's AD 1984, only 28 years ago. WorldCoinGallery example. And since Egypt apparently does not have its own mint these days, these coins cannot count in the contest as "Giza".
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Bing's Avatar
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4253 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  09:25 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Bing to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I have to rely on my Romans to fit the bill of this Smackdown and I know they will be up against some tough Greek competition. But here are what I consider my best two from cities of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World:

Coin 1: Titus Alexandria Tetradrachm, Dattari 426, struck in year 2 (79-80 AD):

OBV: AVTOK TITOY - laureate head right
REV: Bust of Serapis right, LB before
12.7g, 25mm

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Coin 2. Marcus Antonius Ionia Silver cistophoric tetradrachm, RPC I 2201, struck at Ephesus in 39 BC:

OBV: M ANTONIVS IMP COS DESIG ITER ET TERT, head of Antony right, wreathed in ivy, lituus below, all within wreath of ivy and grap
REV: III VIR R P C, bust of Octavia right on cista flanked by snakes
11.8gm, 26mm
VF with ancient scraches, nice dark toning

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.
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DavidUK's Avatar
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2624 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  09:25 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DavidUK to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I watched a lecture by an archaeologist the other day who came out with some extremely unorthodox views...

First he talked about the Mayans and the Inca's all believing that certain pre-existing monolithic structures had been made by gods. Then he claimed that the pyramids predated the Egyptians and that had they really been made as tombs for kings the insides would be more heavily adorned by hieroglyphics etc. He then made some points about the 12 astrological constellations and how they knew so much about the solar system and the stars.

(There was a planetarium discovered on the sea-bed able to predict eclipses dating to the Greeks, I saw an amazing documentary on that one)

Up to this point it was an interesting and feasible lecture...then he explained that they knew so much for one of two reasons... either a more advanced civilisation had existed before and passed the knowledge down or we had been visited by aliens :)

So if the aliens put the pyrimids there that would explain why they didn't put them on the coins :P

Sorry if that seemed slightly off topic, but it was kind of relevant to Sap's reply...anyway good coins lets see more!
Edited by DavidUK
09/13/2012 09:29 am
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Eng5858's Avatar
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1316 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  10:43 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Eng5858 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply


Very nice coins so far.....I'll be watching and learning, I don't have any of the 7 wonders coins....
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Ben's Avatar
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 Posted 09/13/2012  1:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ben to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Im surprised I could enter this one - I couldnt find an Alexandria one, but I do have an Ephesian bee coin.

Obverse, Stag with Astralogus, magistrates (illegible) name left.
Reverse, Bee with E P. circa 295-380BC. Appears to be unpublished, I cant find an AE17 with astralogus.

This dates from the building period of the third temple of artemis and all the way back to the second temple. I cant be sure of which without getting the magistrate's name.

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Sorry for the picture - its not really oval, its very round.
Edited by Ben
09/13/2012 2:22 pm
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echizento's Avatar
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 Posted 09/13/2012  2:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Tetradrachm
CARUS 282-283 AD
A K MA KAPOC CEB
LA (year one)
Alexandria mint
Emmett 3999

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

Smack-Down-Xv--Theamata--The-7-Wonders-Of-The-Ancient-World.

TETRADRACHM
CARINUS 283-285 AD
AK MA KAPI NOCK
LA (year one)
Alexandria mint
BMC244
Edited by echizento
09/13/2012 2:26 pm
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DVCollector's Avatar
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10045 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  3:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DVCollector to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Up to this point it was an interesting and feasible lecture...then he explained that they knew so much for one of two reasons... either a more advanced civilisation had existed before and passed the knowledge down or we had been visited by aliens :)
This was an idea promoted by a hack 'archaeologist' from the 70's--Erich von Daeniken--who suggested that grand achievements by ancient cultures couldn't possibly be due to their intelligence and culture; therefore aliens must have done it. Even today, there's a flock of amateurs pushing this same cultural arrogance to sell books and lectures. Certainly, the engineering of the great pyramids using 21/2-ton blocks is problematic. But, if that was accomplished with 'alien technology', wouldn't you think the Egyptians might use power tools rather than hand-chisels to shape the blocks--or use a more efficient and durable material such as metals, polymers, or some composite? If aliens ever visited the earth, the archeological record doesn't show any evidence.

Admittedly OT--but that's my contribution for this smackdown--having worked for an university archaeology publisher for some years.

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2838 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  4:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bobbyhelmet to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
...who suggested that grand achievements by ancient cultures couldn't possibly be due to their intelligence and culture


This really annoys me, the problem is that most Archaeologists are not practical people but academics. The ancients were advanced but in different ways to today and it usually takes a decent Engineer to debunk their crack-pot alien/fantastical theories.

People like Jean-Pierre Houdin did it with the Pyramids and Wally Wallington with Stonehenge. Both Engineers just used simple construction principles and a bit of common sense to show what can be achieved with just a bit of thinking and a bit of organisation.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Pierre_Houdin
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wally_Wallington
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stevex6's Avatar
3352 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  5:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add stevex6 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Whoa => you've got a couple of winners there, Bing!!



=> oh, and nice coins by everybody else as well ...

Edited by stevex6
09/13/2012 5:37 pm
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Bing's Avatar
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4253 Posts
 Posted 09/13/2012  5:41 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Bing to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thanks Jerry. A couple of my favorites for sure.
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