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A silver coin of Thasos showing a tailed satyr and a volute krater Coin Type: Silver trihemiobol of Thasos in Thrace, 411-350 BCE
Mint and Date: Thasos, 411-350 BCE
Size and Weight: 11mm, 0.75g
Obverse: Tailed and bearded satyr running right, holding kantharos out at waist level in right hand.
Reverse: Volute krater with legend to right and left. (Legend not visible on this example.)
Ref: SNG Copenhagen 1031; BMC 53, S 563
Provenance: Ancient Treasures (eBay), February 2006
BW Ref: 002 025 073
Click on the picture for a larger scale view of the coin

Note 1: See this link for a non-crystallised example of a trihemiobol of Thasos.

Note 2: This note about the volute krater is from a post by Patricia Lawrence on the Forum Classical Numismatics Discussion Board:

"Kraters (...) had flat lids that kept flies and dirt out, that lay on top of their rims, not fitted lids like amphoras. An early volute krater is the François Vase. By the 5cBC, especially the bronze ones which are wealthy/ceremonial/funerary--and the representation on the Thasian coins is of a fancy bronze volute krater: note, too, that it probably was sanctuary or public property inasmuch as it remains exactly the same type on the later coins that someone else posted."


The content of this page was last updated on 2 May 2008