Javascript must be enabled to continue!
TWO TYPES OF TYRAS COINS FROM THE LATE HELLENISTIC PERIOD (religious aspect)
View through CrossRef
The history of the study of Tyras pre-Roman coins which began more than 170 years ago is briefly observed in the paper. Among them two types have been identified dated by well-known researchers quite ambiguously. Based on the relative chronology accepted by most scholars the authors attribut the types of coin under consideration to the Late Hellenistic period. The first type features a front-facing head of Demeter wearing a wreath of wheat ears on the obverse, and a woven cista — a sacred attribute of the goddess — on the reverse. The second type depicts a veiled profile head of Demeter on the obverse. According to our interpretation, the reverse does not show a kalathos or a vessel with a poppy stem but rather a densely woven cista of a different shape and larger size.
The authors also characterize the image of Demeter and analyze her cultic attributes: the woven cista, the wheat-ear wreath and ears, and the veil — linking these symbols in the development of agriculture. A new approach to interpreting the cista — a unique attribute of the goddess for the ancient cities of the Northern Pontic region — alongside related deities and symbols, allows us to associate it with the Eleusinian Mysteries, which were likely conducted in the temple of Tyras as well. As for the prototype of Demeter’s image, it is suggested that it may be either a copy of a monumental temple statue in Tyras or inspired by key elements of large bronze drachms from Olbia Pontica. Attention is also given to contemporary cistophory-coins of the Pergam Kingdom and various Asia Minor cities, which display the cistae entwined with snakes and ivy — attributes of Dionysus. However, whether these coins, widely circulated throughout many regions of the Hellenistic world during the 2nd century BC, influenced the minting of the Tyras coin types in question, remains a subject for further numismatic research based on a broader range of sources.
Institute of Archaeology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Title: TWO TYPES OF TYRAS COINS FROM THE LATE HELLENISTIC PERIOD (religious aspect)
Description:
The history of the study of Tyras pre-Roman coins which began more than 170 years ago is briefly observed in the paper.
Among them two types have been identified dated by well-known researchers quite ambiguously.
Based on the relative chronology accepted by most scholars the authors attribut the types of coin under consideration to the Late Hellenistic period.
The first type features a front-facing head of Demeter wearing a wreath of wheat ears on the obverse, and a woven cista — a sacred attribute of the goddess — on the reverse.
The second type depicts a veiled profile head of Demeter on the obverse.
According to our interpretation, the reverse does not show a kalathos or a vessel with a poppy stem but rather a densely woven cista of a different shape and larger size.
The authors also characterize the image of Demeter and analyze her cultic attributes: the woven cista, the wheat-ear wreath and ears, and the veil — linking these symbols in the development of agriculture.
A new approach to interpreting the cista — a unique attribute of the goddess for the ancient cities of the Northern Pontic region — alongside related deities and symbols, allows us to associate it with the Eleusinian Mysteries, which were likely conducted in the temple of Tyras as well.
As for the prototype of Demeter’s image, it is suggested that it may be either a copy of a monumental temple statue in Tyras or inspired by key elements of large bronze drachms from Olbia Pontica.
Attention is also given to contemporary cistophory-coins of the Pergam Kingdom and various Asia Minor cities, which display the cistae entwined with snakes and ivy — attributes of Dionysus.
However, whether these coins, widely circulated throughout many regions of the Hellenistic world during the 2nd century BC, influenced the minting of the Tyras coin types in question, remains a subject for further numismatic research based on a broader range of sources.
Related Results
Tyras in Late Antiquity
Tyras in Late Antiquity
The article presents materials related to the existence of Tyras in the late Roman period. Based on the available data, it is assumed that there were two phases in the existence of...
Charon Coins Found in Parion Chamber Tomb 5
Charon Coins Found in Parion Chamber Tomb 5
Abstract
The subject of this article is the Charon coins found in Chamber Tomb 5 in the Eastern Necropolis of Parion. Fourteen coins belonging to Coela (2), Perinthos (1), ...
LATE ROMAN COIN FINDS IN UKRAINE: HISTORY OF RESEARCH
LATE ROMAN COIN FINDS IN UKRAINE: HISTORY OF RESEARCH
Analyzing the published researches by previous researchers of new finds of coins of the different periods we were determining as one of the actual directions of research in the med...
Despre medaliile familiei Weifert din Pančevo / The Medals of the Weifert Family from Pančevo
Despre medaliile familiei Weifert din Pančevo / The Medals of the Weifert Family from Pančevo
The numismatic collection of the Banat Museum in Timişoara includes two rare bronze medals dedicated to members of the well known Weifert family from Pančevo (Serbia). One is a med...
Faith Tweets: Ambient Religious Communication and Microblogging Rituals
Faith Tweets: Ambient Religious Communication and Microblogging Rituals
There’s no reason to think that Jesus wouldn’t have Facebooked or twittered if he came into the world now. Can you imagine his killer status updates? Reverend Schenck, New York, Al...
Religious Pluralism
Religious Pluralism
Within the philosophy of religion, theories of religious pluralism are models that provide a philosophical account of religious diversity. They are not descriptive theories of reli...
A Sociological Study on Abdi̇zade's History of Amasya: Religious Groups in Amasya
A Sociological Study on Abdi̇zade's History of Amasya: Religious Groups in Amasya
Since groups constitute one of the essential components of the social structure, they form a fundamental subject of sociological inquiry. A subcategory of social groups, religious ...
Examining the religious tourism potential of Manisa, Turkey with a marketing perspective
Examining the religious tourism potential of Manisa, Turkey with a marketing perspective
Purpose
– This paper aims to, by having a marketing perspective, assess the potential of Manisa for religious tourism and shed some light on the ways of increasing ...

