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A guide to coins and coin terms

04 November 2023
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Most ancient Greek coins were handmade, and were produced by striking or punching the coin design into blank pieces of metal. The engraver would first carve the designs for the front (obverse) and back (reverse) of the coin into blocks called 'dies'. Next, a soft blank metal disc was placed between the dies. The engraver would then strike the dies with a hammer, to stamp the design into the metal disc between them.

Ancient Greek Coin Names
  • Drachm(a) = standard silver coin equivalent to six obols
  • Hemidrachm = worth half of a drachma (from ancient Greek 峒∥嘉-聽meaning 鈥榟alf鈥 ie. hemisphere)
  • Tetradrachm = silver coin worth four drachma
  • Stater = a denomination of coinage, minted in both gold and silver
Coin Terms
  • Legend = the inscription on the coin, usually the name of the leader or ruler who made them
  • Mint = the place of a coin鈥檚 production
  • Obverse = the front of the coin (heads)
  • Reverse = the back of the coin (tails)
  • Type = people who study coins distinguish between 'types' according to the images on them
Dates and Times
  • Archaic Period = the modern name ascribed to the period that began in approximately 600 BCE and ran until the Persian Wars in 480 BCE
Guide to coins and terms
  • BCE = Before Common Era (ie. BC)
  • CE = Common Era (ie. AD)
  • ca = short for 鈥渃irca鈥 meaning 'approximately', from Latin 'around' or 'about'.
  • Classical Period = the modern name ascribed to the period that began in approximately 480 BCE and lasted until around the death of Alexander III in 323 BCE
  • Hellenistic = the modern name ascribed to the period of time that began with Alexander鈥檚 death and ended with Roman domination of Greece in the 1st century BCE
Greek Inscription Transliteratio

Many of the coins featured in this exhibition have 'legends' or inscriptions on them. Inscriptions could be in different languages, depending on where they were made, and are sometimes shortened to make it simpler to fit them onto the coin. Below is a selection of translations of the inscriptions on the coins featured here. The first word in each pair is the ancient Greek spelling of the inscription. The second word in each pair shows the translation in the genitive case, (which means 鈥榦f or belonging to鈥), which is used for inscriptions.

螒螞螘围螒螡螖巍螣危 / Alexandros
螒螞螘围螒螡螖巍螣违 / Alexandrou

螒螡韦螜螣围螣危 / Antiokhos
螒螡韦螜螣围螣违 / Antiokhou

螔螒危螜螞螘违危 / Basileus
螔螒危螜螞螘惟危 / Basileos

螘螤螜桅螒螡螣违危 / Epiphanous
螘螤螜桅螒螡螣危 / Epiphanos

螘违螤螒韦螘巍 / Eupater
螘违螤螒韦螣巍螣危 / Eupatoros

螝螒危危螒螡螖巍螣危 / Kassandros
螝螒危危螒螡螖巍螣违 / Kassandrou

螞违危螜螠螒围螣危 / Lysimakhos
螞违危螜螠螒围螣违 / Lysimakhou

螠螘螡螒螡螖巍螣危 / Menandros
螠螘螡螒螡螖巍螣违 / Menandrou

螠螜螛巍螒螖螒韦螚危 / Mithradates
螠螜螛巍螒螖螒韦螣违 / Mithradatou

桅螜螞螜螤螤螣危 / Philippos
桅螜螞螜螤螤螣违 / Philippou

危螘螞螘违螝螣危 / Seleukos
危螘螞螘违螝螣违 / Seleukou

危螣韦螘巍 / Soter
危螣韦螘巍螣危 / Soteros

People, Places and Clothes
  • Aegis = Greek symbol of divine power wielded by Zeus and Athena. A goatskin shield tasselled with snakes, with the slain head of the Gorgon Medusa set in the centre
  • Achaemenids = the ruling dynasty of the Persian Empire beginning with Cyrus the Great and ending with Darius III when Alexander defeated him and claimed the Empire.
  • Argeads (峒埾佄澄滴次蔽) = the ruling dynasty of Macedonia ca. 700 鈥 310 BCE, supposedly descended from the Arigves of the Peloponnesus.
  • Chiton = standard garment of the ancient Greeks, a square of draped cloth pinned at the shoulders and belted at the waist
  • Diadem = a headband worn as a sign of kingship, adopted by Alexander from the Persian Achaemenids and worn by the Hellenistic kings.
  • Diadochi (螖喂维未慰蠂慰喂) = 'successors', Alexander鈥檚 generals that competed for his Empire after his death.
  • Nike = the winged goddess of Victory.
  • Satrap = a local governor appointed by the Persian King to oversee a 鈥榮atrapy鈥 of the Empire.
  • Sinistroverse = written right to left
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