Uncleaned wheel-money AE13 from Istros, Moesia (420-400 BC), Ancient Greek

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Wheel of four spokes, dot at center / Crude partially visible IΣT. About 13 mm, 1.13 grams. AMNG I, 1, 182, 531. SNG BM London 220.

Not completely cleaned, showing excellent details. Can easily be cleaned to improve their appearance.

The Milesian colonies of Olbia, Borysthenes, Istros, Odessos, and Apollonia, founded on the western Black sea coast in the 7th century BC, were once the central points of exchange and trade between the Greeks and local Scythian and Thracian populations. With the invention of coinage as a form of exchange of goods, a few types of pre-monetary items were introduced: the ubiquitous ˜dolphins™ and the scarcer ˜arrowheads™ and ˜wheel-coins™, all cast in copper. All were originally thought to have been from Olbia, but more recent hoard evidence indicates the latter were produced primarily at Istros and Apollonia. These pieces remained in circulation in the west Pontic area for about two centuries, until being finally replaced by struck coinage. Recent publications of finds from South Russia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, and Romania limited the circulation area of these proto-monies to the narrow coastal strip along the western/north-western shores of the Black sea. Some scholars suggested the ˜arrowheads™ were produced there since Apollo, with his bow and arrows, was the main deity who supervised the colonies of Miletus. As a god of archery, Apollo was well known with epithets as Aphetoros (œgod of the bow�) and Argurotoxos (œwith the silver bow�). These proto-money items are known in French as ˜monnaiespoints de flèche™ or ˜flèche-monnaies™, but in English they are best known as 'arrowhead money'. For further discussion, cf. H. Bartlett-Wells, 'The Arrow-money of Thrace and South Russia' in: SAN 9/1, 1978, 6-9, 12; S. Solovyov, ˜Monetary Circulation and the Political History of Archaic Borysthenes™, Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia, 12/1-2, (Leiden 2006), 63-75. See also D.M. Schaps, The Invention of Coinage and the Monetization of Greece (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2005), for a general study on the invention of coinage.

(F135-w22283)

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