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Greek Thrace Hadrianopolis

Bu sitedeki tasarım ve tüm içerikler Agesilaos Antik Sikkeler Nümizmatik tarafından hazırlanmaktadır. Kaynak gösterilmeden site içeriğinin izinsiz olarak kısmen veya tümüyle kopyalanması/paylaşılması/değiştirilmesi Fikir Ve Sanat Eserleri Kanunu Madde 71 gereği yasak ve suçtur. Agesilaos Antik Sikkeler Nümizmatik içerik kullanım koşullarını ihlal ederek intihal suçu işleyenler hakkında TCK ve FSEK ilgili kanun ve yönetmeliklerine göre yasal işlem başlatılacağını bu alandan yazılı olarak beyan ederiz.

ΑΓΗΣΙΛΑΟΣ

ΝΟΜΙΣΜΑΤΟΛOΓΟΣ
Φιλομμειδής
Katılım
4 Şub 2022
Mesajlar
11,831
Beğeni
12,620

Thrace Hadrianopolis - Pseudo-autonomous issue, time of the Severans AD 193-235


The identification of the figure is not recognisable as a goddess, such as Demeter, who can appear veiled but with identifying attributes such as a grain wreath or holding a poppy. Instead, she is likely to be Olympias, the mother of Alexander the Great.

According to the so-called Alexander Romance [believed to have been recorded in the third century BC], Alexander was fathered by a refugee Egyptian Pharaoh, Nektanebo II, who was also a great magician. Whilst King Philip was absent on a campaign, the exiled Nektanebo succeeded in deceiving Olympias into receiving his advances by taking the form of a serpent.

As a follower of mystery religions, Olympias was famed - and feared - for her ability to handle snakes during religious ceremonies. According to Plutarch, the biographer of 1st century AD, she was a devout member of the orgiastic snake-worshiping cult of Dionysos, a group that worshipped the god of wine, fertility, and religious ecstasy. A possible date for this coin is the time of the Severans, since it is known that Caracalla had mania for Alexander and mimicked him in his personal style.

Agesilaos Antik Sikkeler Nümizmatik_hdrpl.jpg
 
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