27/05/2013
Lydian electrum trite (4.71g, 13x10x4 mm). This coin type, made of a gold and silver alloy, was in all likelihood the world's first, minted by King Alyattes in Sardis, Lydia, Asia Minor (present-day Turkey), c. 610-600 BC. It can be attributed, among other ways, as Weidauer 59-75.............
Lions have been considered kings of the jungle, and symbols of kingly authority, from time immemorial. One of the most fascinating coins of all time, a coin that I believe is the first true coin, features one the most fascinating lions ever to appear on a coin.
The coin illustrated above is a Lydian third stater, or trite,[1]minted sometime around 600 BC in Lydia, Asia Minor (current-day Turkey), a country in close geographic and cultural proximity to the Greek colonies in Asia Minor.
These coins are pricey (typically costing in the $1,000 to $2,000 range), and though scarce are not especially rare,[2]just in significant demand because of their history, the evocativeness of their design, their metallurgic characteristics, and their mystery. Other coins may vie for the title of the world's first coin, also from Lydia, nearby in Ionia, in the Middle East, and across the world in India and China, though none do so as persuasively.[3]
The Lydian Lion is the one coin I'd personally call "The Coin." It directly preceded ancient Greek coinage, which through Rome begot all Western coinage, and which through the Seleukids, Parthians, and Sassanians begot all Islamic coinage. Indian coinage has largely been a product of Greek, Roman, and Islamic influences.[4]Chinese coinage, though it probably developed independently, was succeeded by Western-style coinage in the late nineteenth century.[5]Other countries in Asia, in Africa, and elsewhere have adopted the Western approach to coinage as well. It's not chauvinistic, and it's only mildly hyperbolic, to suggest that virtually all coinage in use today is the progeny of the Lydian Lion, that it's the Adam of coins.[6]
With certain matters relating to the first coinage, suggestions and speculation, deduction and theorizing are necessities because of the paucity of written, archeological, hoard, find spot, and die-study evidence. What we don't know about this coin and other early coins is at least as great as what we do know, and with what we think we know, there's can be much disagreement and debate. Still, the totality of the evidence that exists points to certain conclusions that can be beneficial in understanding the origin of coinage as well as, for coin collectors, in appreciating our collections.
Among what we know with confidence is that the Lydian Lion trite was the most common Lydian denomination of its time[7]and that it's made of electrum, an alloy of gold and silver called "white gold" in ancient times.[8]
The Lydian Lion trite may have been worth about a month's subsistence, according to Ian Carradice and Martin Jessop Price.[9]R.M. Cook placed a higher value on it, suggesting it may have had the buying power of about eleven sheep.[10]Similarly, Richard Seaford felt it could buy about ten goats.[11]But as an indication of how unsettled certain matters involving these coins are, Michael Mitchiner placed a much lower value on it, believing it to be worth approximately one sheep or three jars of wine.[12]
Aesthetically, the Lydian Lion is pleasing.[13]It has a captivating archaic style, with the design consisting primarily of simple geometric shapes. The composition is both balanced and dynamic. The hatch marks of the lion's mane divide the coin roughly in half, diagonally. Most of the visual "action" -- the roaring mouth with teeth bared, the fierce triangle-shaped eye, and the mysterious starburst (often described as a nose wart) -- takes place to the right.
The lion head is sometimes referred to as a lion protome, with "protome" an archeological term meaning decorative motif in the form of an animal or human head. The lion's mane and sunburst vary in style between earlier and later versions of the coin. As with most Lydian Lion specimens, the lion on the coin pictured above faces right; with rare varieties, it faces left. Other rare varieties feature an inscription or part of one on the obverse, in some cases with part of another lion head confronting the first lion head.
Like most of the earliest coins, instead of a design, the Lydian Lion features on the reverse an incuse punch created during the minting process, from the hammer used to force the blank planchet into the anvil die. With the trite, the punch consists of two squares that are joined or separate. The punch on smaller denominations consists of a single square.
The specimen pictured above weighs 4.71 grams, has a diameter of 13mm at its widest, and at 4mm, is thick as a nugget. It likely consists of about 55 percent gold, 43 percent silver, 2 percent copper, and trace amounts of lead and iron, with the the later variety consiting of slightly lower gold and higher silver, based upon analyses of these coins by a number of different researchers. The above variety can be attributed, among other ways, as Weidauer Type 15 and Mitchiner Group C.
What we also don't know with certainty about these coins is why they were minted and what exactly the obverse design means, though there's been no shortage of proposed answers. The dating of these coins has also been widely debated. Because of the significance of Lydian Lions, many numismatists have researched and studied these and related questions, but there's still much room for further research and clarity.
By
Srinivas. N