Seleukid Coins

Timarchos

Bronze coin  •  References

TIM-AE-01, obverseTIM-AE-01, reverse

Identification Number TIM-AE-01
Mint: Ekbatana1
Period: c. 162 - 161 BC
Denomination: AE Dichalkous
Weight: 8.42 g
Diameter: 21.5 - 23.0 mm
Obverse: Diademed head of Timarchos right; dotted border
Reverse: ‘ΒΑΣΙΛ[ΕΩΣ] ΜΕΓΑΛ[ΟΥ]’ right, ‘[Τ]ΙΜΑΡ[ΧΟΥ]’ left (“of Great King Timarchos”); Nike advancing left, crowning royal name and holding palm branch over shoulder
Die Position: c. 135º
References: SNG Spaer, 1392
Note: File adjustment marks are visible on the reverse, as it is typical for Timarchos’s bronze coins produced at Ekbatana.

1 The capital of Media.

Strabo, Geography, 11.13.1: Media is divided into two parts. One part of it is called Greater Media, of which the metropolis is Ecbatana (Ekbatana), a large city containing the royal residence of the Median empire (the Parthians continue to use this as a royal residence even now, and their kings spend at least their summers there, for Media is a cold country; but their winter residence is at Seleuceia, on the Tigris (Seleukeia on the Tigris) near Babylon).

Strabo, Geography, 11.13.5: ... and Ecbatana (Ekbatana) was winter residence (an error of the copyist for “summer residence” or “royal residence”) for the Persian kings, and likewise for the Macedonians (i.e., for Seleukid kings) who, after overthrowing the Persians, occupied Syria; and still today it affords the kings of the Parthians the same advantages and security.

References:

Houghton, Arthur; Spaer, Arnold (with the assistance of Catharine Lorber): Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum. Israel I. The Arnold Spaer Collection of Seleucid Coins. Italo Vecchi Ltd., London, 1998. (abbr. SNG Spaer)
Strabo: Geography. Translated and ed. by H.C. Hamilton and W. Falconer. William Heinemann, Ltd., London, 1924. (The Perseus Digital Library, http://www.perseus.org/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Strab.+toc)
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