A magnificent third stater from Metapontion from the Moretti and Kunstfreund Collections
Los 40
LUCANIA. Metapontion. Time of Pyrrhos of Epeiros, circa 280-279 BC. Tetrobol or Third Stater (Gold, 13 mm, 2.87 g, 6 h), Attic standard. ΛEYKIΠΠ[OΣ] Bearded head of Leukippos to right, wearing crested Corinthian helmet decorated with Skylla hurling a stone on the bowl. Rev. Two six-grained barley ears with leaves to left and right; in fields to left and right, M-[E]; between the barley ears, ΣI. Basel 153 (this coin). Jameson 1867. Johnston Class G, 5.1 (this coin). HN Italy 1630. SNG ANS 396 (same dies). SNG Lockett 404 (same dies). A splendid, very well pedigreed coin of wonderful style struck in high relief. Light corrosion on the reverse, otherwise, good extremely fine.


From the Kleinkunst Collection and from the collection of A. D. Moretti, Numismatica Ars Classica 13, 8 October 1998, 153, privately acquired from Leu Numismatik on 10 October 1973, and from the C. Gillet Collection ('Kunstfreund'), photofile no. 202.


The impressive Leukippos-gold coinage of Metapontion was likely struck during the early stages of the Pyrrhic War, in which Pyrrhos of Epeiros, with significant help by the other Diadochi, came to the aid of Tarentum and the Greeks of southern Italy in their fight against the expansionism of Rome. The King successfully defeated a large Roman army in the Battle of Herakleia in 280 BC, but the follow-up hard-fought Battle of Asculum in 279 BC was inconclusive and led to the loss of many lives on either side. Plutarch, who claims a costly victory for the Greeks, reports that Pyrrhos replied to the congratulations of his officers with the famous sentence: 'If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans, we shall be utterly ruined!' (Plut. IX, 21.8). The adventurous King left southern Italy soon thereafter to combat the Carthaginians in Sicily, but after a series of early victories he angered the civic pride of the Greeks on the island with his despotic manner. In 275 BC, Pyrrhos hence returned to Italy, where he suffered a decisive defeat by a Roman army under Manius Curius Dentatus near a place called Maleventum, which was subsequently renamed Beneventum by the victors. Pyrrhos retreated to Epeiros and was killed in 272 BC in street fighting in Argos, reportedly after an old woman threw a stone at him from the roof of her house, knocking him out and leaving him exposed to his foes. By this time, the city of Metapontion had already lost its independence to Rome, while Tarentum, where Pyrrhos had left behind a small Epeirote garrison, would fall victim to a Roman siege shortly thereafter. A number of subsequent campaigns by the Romans brought their conquest of southern Italy to an end in the following years, after which they would direct their attention to Sicily, where the monumental First Punic War (264-241 BC) was about to unfold.
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