Description: ATTICA, Athens. Circa 440 BC - 404 BC. AR Tetradrachm (17.1 gm). Helmeted head of Athena right, with frontal eye / Owl standing right, head, closed tail feathers; olive sprig and crescent to left; all within incuse square. There are a few light scratches and some helmet wear as well as a test cut on the head of the Owl of Athens on the reverse. Although this is not graded by NGC, I would personally rate it easily as VF, but it could be higher. This coin is authentic and I guarantee that it. You can return it to me during the 14 day return policy if you are unhappy with your purchase for any reason or if the coin is deemed as not authentic by an NGC representative or a professional certified dealer, I will refund your money within 3 months of the purchase date. Attica Athens Athena/Owl Tetradrachm AR ancient coin Athenian Owls, thick, heavy, high-relief silver coins minted more than 2,000 years ago, were parguably the most influential of all coins, and the Classical Owl tetradrachm, pictured above, is the most widely recognized ancient coin among the general public today Owls were the first widely used international coin. They popularized the practice of putting a head on the obverse of a coin and a tail (animal) on the reverse. Owls were handled by Pythagoras, Xenophanes, Democritus, Hippocrates, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Euclid, Archimedes, and others whose thinking formed the very foundation of Western civilization. They remained thematically unchanged, Athena on the obverse, her owl on the reverse, for half a millennium, through great changes in the ancient world. Because of their centrality, they were known as "Owls" in ancient times as they are today despite many other ancient coins depicting owls in an equally prominent fashion. President Theodore Roosevelt used a Classical Owl as a pocket piece, which inspired him to order the redesign of U.S. coins early last century.Like other great powers, Athens treated its money not only as a way of facilitating commerce and trade and projecting its image abroad but also as a way of making money. Athens earned seigniorage profits on each Owl minted, whether the source was freshly mined silver or the silver coins of other cities. The traders and merchants of other cities, in turn, liked Owls because of their easy exchangeability. Owls thus became the world's first great trade currency, and they were followed in this role by among others Alexander the Great tetradrachms and staters, Roman denarii, Spanish American pieces of eight, Dutch lion dollars, Austrian Maria Theresa thalers, and American dollars.7The mythology depicted on Owls is equally interesting. Athena was goddess of both wisdom and warfare, combining within herself two qualities we find incompatible today but the ancients didn't, a telling difference between their world and ours. She was the patron goddess of Athens, one of the greatest cities of all time.According to ancient Greek mythology, Athena was the daughter of Zeus and his first wife, Metis, whose name meant "wisdom." Metis warned Zeus that their first son would be more powerful than Zeus himself, which agitated Zeus so much that when Metis became pregnant he swallowed whole Metis and their unborn child. This gave him a headache, which he cured by splitting his head open with an axe. (Zeus may have been powerful but he wasn't necessarily smart.) From the wound came forth Athena, fully grown.
Price: 695 USD
Location: Denver, Colorado
End Time: 2024-08-23T22:43:33.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Denomination: Tetradrachm
Historical Period: Greek (450 BC-100 AD)
Cleaned/Uncleaned: Uncleaned
Composition: Silver
Provenance: Ownership History Not Available
Year: 404 BC
Era: Ancient
Fineness: 0.958
Grade: Ungraded
Country/Region of Manufacture: Greece