Silver Stater - Ancient Greece - ZEUS & ATHENA

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Silver Stater - Ancient Greece, Thessalian League - Struck c. late 2nd-mid 1st century BC

Magistrates: Sosipatros & Gorgopas

Obv: Head of Zeus right, wearing oak leaf wreath

Rev: Helmeted Athena, right, with spear and shield

Ref: BCD Thessaly II 862.3 

Provenance: This coin is ex CNG, from the BCD Collection.

22mm, 6.21gm

The Thessalian League was a loose confederacy of feudal-like city-states and tribes in the Thessalian plain in Northern Greece and was run by a few aristocratic Thessalian families (Aleuadae and Skopadae). The seat of the Thessalian diet was Larissa.

In the Classical Olympian pantheon, Athena was remade as the favorite daughter of Zeus, born fully armed from his forehead. The story of her birth comes in several versions. In the one most commonly cited, Zeus lay with Metis, the goddess of crafty thought and wisdom, but he immediately feared the consequences. It had been prophesied that Metis would bear children more powerful than the sire, even Zeus himself. In order to forestall these dire consequences, after lying with Metis, Zeus “put her away inside his own belly”; he “swallowed her down all of a sudden”. He was too late: Metis had already conceived.

Eventually Zeus experienced an enormous headache; Prometheus, Hephaestus, Hermes, Ares, or Palaemon (depending on the sources examined) cleaved Zeus’ head with the double-headed Minoan axe, the labrys. Athena leaped from Zeus’ head, fully grown and armed, with a shout — “and pealed to the broad sky her clarion cry of war." 

  • Inventory# PA-3339
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