Modify or add data on this page

A Possibly Unique Isis Head Bronze Coin of Cleopatra I (180-176 BC)

Author Richard Pincock
Published in The Numismatic Chronicle, Volume 170 (2010)
Pages 53-62 (10 pages)
Language English
Download https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/42678882
Number
N#
L118399
 

Abstract

The Isis bronze coins of Ptolemaic Egypt, SNG Cop. 240 (Sv1154), 246 (Sv1233), 247 (Sv1234), – (Sv1235), 253 (Sv1237), 256 (Sv1238), 261 (Sv1240), 278 (Sv1382), 279 (Sv1384), and 332 (Sv1491), show on obverse a female head with corkscrew locks and a wreath of barley. Both features indicate the Egyptian-Greek goddess Isis-Demeter. A recently discovered example of an Isis coin with the obverse legend ΒΑΣΙΛΙΣΣΗΣ ΚΛΕΟΠΑΤΡΑΣ belongs to a group of coins (Sv1380-2 = SNG Cop. 276-7), all with A monogram and obverse legend for 'Queen Cleopatra', which were produced during the joint reign of Cleopatra I (180-176 BC) with her co-regent son Ptolemy VI, although this coin may have been produced in the reign of Cleopatra II with Ptolemy VI (176-145 BC). Various published views of the portraiture of Cleopatra I are reviewed but some uncertainty remains. However, the bronze Ptolemaic Isis coins of Alexandria represent Queen Cleopatra as Isis.

Contribute to the catalogue

Modify this page

Viewed 43 times

Cite this page: https://numista.com/L118399 (copy permalink) Permalink copied