Coin Community Family of Web Sites Join Thousands of Coin, Bullion, & Money Collectors
Join Thousands of Coin, Bullion, & Money Collectors Coin, Banknote and Medal Collectors's Online Mall Royal Estate Auctions - $1 Coin AuctionsSpecializing in Modern Numismatics Royal Canadian Mint products, Canadian, Polish, American, and world coins and banknotes. 300,000 items to help build your collection! Vancouvers #1 Coin and Paper Money Dealer








Username:
Password:
Save Password
Forgot your Password?


This page may contain links that result in small commissions to keep this free site up and running.

Welcome Guest! Registering and/or logging in will remove the anchor (bottom) ads. It's Free!

A Rare Coin With An Extinct Plant

To participate in the forum you must log in or register.
Author Previous TopicReplies: 10 / Views: 3,319Next Topic  
Pillar of the Community
ThisIsFun's Avatar
United States
2480 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  3:47 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add ThisIsFun to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
This type of coin caught my eye a while back. At a glance, I thought the plant was equisetum. It's not; it is thought to be a now extinct plant called silphium. It may have belonged to the fennel family; it could be the extant plant Ferula tingitana. Reading about this plant furthered my resolve to find an numismatic example.

As luck would have it, these coins of North Africa are ridiculously expensive. I managed to find a well-priced although not very glamorous example in the recent Roma auction. It's pretty scratched up-- at best clumsily cleaned, at worst perhaps tooled. Still, given that I didn't want to pay a fortune for an example, I'm happy with it. Bonus-- it also shows Zeus Ammon, whose coin depictions I avidly collect!

A-Rare-Coin-With-An-Extinct-Plant

KYRENAIKA, Barke
480-450 BC

AR hemidrachm, 13 mm, 1.57 gm
Obv: silphium plant
Rev: head of Zeus Ammon right within linear frame, B A P K around
Ref: (which I have not checked) Müller MAA 301. Very rare.



Warning! Extreme pedantism follows!



Theophrastus (371-287 BC), mentions silphium several times in Historia Plantarum:

"In the Cyrenaica the cypress grows and the olives are fairest and the oil most abundant. Most special of all to this district is the silphium..."

He goes on to describe the physical characteristics and plant product preparation here and in the next three pages, noting that it grows wild and disappears upon cultivation of the land (although he further documents contradicting agricultural anecdotes). The plant appears to relatively new, or at least newly discovered: "The people of Cyrene say that the silphium appeared seven years before they founded their city; now they had lived there for about three hundred years before the archonship at Athens at Simonides."

Other online references mention legends that silphium was viewed as a "gift from Apollo".

An article by Henry Koerper and A.L. Kolls, "The Silphium Motif Adorning Ancient Libyan Coinage: Marketing a Medicinal Plant" had many interesting tidbits. It is available for downloading for $39.95 but you can get a free 5 minute peek (and that was enough time to screen cap the whole thing for more leisurely reading )

A-Rare-Coin-With-An-Extinct-Plant

In addition to use as a food, the list of purported medicinal applications of silphium is long:

oral contraceptive and abortifacient
treatment for abdominal pain
treatment for alopecia
treatment for picky exrescences and prolapse
antidote for the poison of weapons, scorpion stings, snake bites
treatment of asthma, bronchitis, coughs, horseness
treatment of dog bites
treatment of bruises and wounds (external application)
a calefacient (warming) medicine
treatment for carbuncles, chillblains, callosities, and indurations
treatment of cardiac diseases
treatment for coeliacus
treatment of convulsions
corn and wart removal
promotion of digestion
as a diuretic
treatment of dropsy, jaundice, and other visceral affections including intestinal wounds
treatment of epilepsy
treatment of eye diseases
for gynecological problems (menstrual problems)
treatment for intestinal worms
as a liniment for lumbago and sciatica
treatment of mange
treatment of nervous disorders
treatment of opisthotonus
pain prevention
treatment of pleurisy
treatment of quartran fever (malaria?)
treatment of shivering
treatment of sinew affections (tendonitis?)
treatment of stomach colds (?)
treatment for tetanus
treatment for toothache
treatment for ulcers
treatment for inflammation of the uvula
as a vaginal suppository (for menstrual disorders?)
a veterinary medicine for sheep


Why did it become extinct? Speculative, but multifactoral: overharvesting due to exploitation of medicinal and veterinary uses. (Betcha it was really due to its reported aphrodisiacal qualities; some behaviors never change.)

Pliny the Elder supposedly said that in Roman markets, silphium was worth its weight in silver denari. I could not find such a quote in Pliny's writings on silphium. However, he does mention that it supposedly acts as a soporific for sheep. Goats, not so much. They just go into fits of sneezing. [note to self: if I bring back silphium à la Jurassic Park, and if I decide to raise goats, keep them away from the silphium.]

Map showing the location of Barce/Barke, from the article by Koerper:

A-Rare-Coin-With-An-Extinct-Plant

Well, that's probably more than you wanted to know about silphium.

Pillar of the Community
Ancientnoob's Avatar
United States
5155 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  5:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ancientnoob to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
This coin type is on my want list....real bad! Super pick up! The fact that it pictures something that no longer exists is PHAT!
Pillar of the Community
ThisIsFun's Avatar
United States
2480 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  5:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ThisIsFun to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
If the plant did indeed not exist until ~637 BC, as per the history told to Theophrastus, and if the last known plant was given to Nero, this plant only existed for just under 700 years!
Moderator
Learn More...
echizento's Avatar
United States
23731 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  6:37 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add echizento to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Nice to see you back, interesting coin and background. You always put a lot of research into your coins. I wish I had the patience to do that.
Pillar of the Community
chuy1530's Avatar
United States
513 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  6:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add chuy1530 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Very cool coin with a very cool background.
Pillar of the Community
chrsmat71's Avatar
United States
4981 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  7:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add chrsmat71 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
a neat plant deserves some fruit!

Pillar of the Community
MetDet71's Avatar
United Kingdom
1569 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  7:22 pm  Show Profile   Check MetDet71's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add MetDet71 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Superb coin TIF! I agree, more than likely down to the aphrodisiacal qualities more than anything else that made the plant hunted into extinction, nice addition, love it.
You will never soar like an eagle if you hang around with turkeys.....
Pillar of the Community
philadelphian's Avatar
United States
3253 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  9:47 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add philadelphian to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Hate to set off a political debate, but I recall that the most widely espoused theory as to why silphium was gathered to the point of extinction was its popularity as a safe and effective abortifacient.
Valued Member
WillyB's Avatar
United States
87 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  10:22 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add WillyB to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Silphium gets my vote for the most interesting plant on a coin. Attractive reverse style on yours!
Moderator
Learn More...
Sap's Avatar
Australia
16872 Posts
 Posted 04/17/2014  11:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Pliny the Elder supposedly said that in Roman markets, silphium was worth its weight in silver denari. I could not find such a quote in Pliny's writings on silphium.

It's right there, in the first line:

Quote:
The juice of this plant is called "laser," and it is greatly in vogue for medicinal as well as other purposes, being sold at the same rate as silver.

Note that this is the price for refined dried silphium juice, not raw silphium.

The primary reason why silphium went extinct is that no-one ever figured out how to domesticate it. For some reason, it simply didn't grow from seeds or cuttings as most other plants do. It certainly never grew if you tried to plant a silphium seed anywhere except North Africa. And, as we have seen, silphium seeds were a crucially valuable component of the plant and were not to be wasted by burying them in a futile attempt to grow another plant. Since the plant has not survived and there aren't even any pieces of it left for testing or genetic sampling, we don't really know the reason for the failure to domesticate, though it almost certainly wasn't for lack of trying. Pliny reports that it was already effectively extinct by his time, with the markets of Rome being forced to find inferior substitutes and the last known plant sent as a gift to emperor Nero. Apparently, he found it delicious.

Given that, and also given the radical climate change North Africa has seen in the past 3000 years, the extinction of silphium in the wild was probably inevitable.

There may yet be hope, however. The Egyptians were well aware of silphium and its desirable properties, long before the Greeks and Romans were. One day we may find some silphium preserved in an Egyptian tomb, which might allow us to clone it or at least identify the species properly.
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
Pillar of the Community
Dutchgulden's Avatar
Netherlands
1204 Posts
 Posted 04/18/2014  10:03 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dutchgulden to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Oh wow, what an interesting coin and thank you for sharing the story about the plant! congrats
  Previous TopicReplies: 10 / Views: 3,319Next Topic  

To participate in the forum you must log in or register.



    




Disclaimer: While a tremendous amount of effort goes into ensuring the accuracy of the information contained in this site, Coin Community assumes no liability for errors. Copyright 2005 - 2026 Coin Community Family- all rights reserved worldwide. Use of any images or content on this website without prior written permission of Coin Community or the original lender is strictly prohibited.
Contact Us  |  Advertise Here  |  Privacy Policy / Terms of Use

Coin Community Forum © 2005 - 2026 Coin Community Forums
It took 0.35 seconds to rattle this change. Forums