Heritage World Coin Auctions > CSNS Signature Sale 3115Auction date: 8 May 2024
Lot number: 32005

Price realized: 1,600 USD   (Approx. 1,488 EUR)   Note: Prices do not include buyer's fees.
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Lot description:


Ancients
ETRURIA. Volaterrae. Ca. 230-220 BC. AE aes grave as (58mm, 125.93 gm, 3h). VF. Janiform head of Culsans, wearing pointed petasus / FE-LA-ΘDI, dolphin left; I (mark of value) above dolphin. Vecchi 143. Thurlow-Vecchi 93. HN Italy 110b. Extremely rare and the first as of Volaterrae we have had the pleasure of offering.

Ex Classical Numismatic Group, Sale 60 (22 May 2002), lot 1438.

One of the challenges in interpreting Etruscan coinage lies in its scarcity, making it difficult to pinpoint specific dates due to isolated mintage and a lack of comparative evidence. This remarkable bronze issue stands out for containing the original Pre-Roman name and spelling of the mint city Volaterrae (inscribed in the Etruscan script as FELAODI), indicating a dating prior to Rome's subjugation of the city. Volaterrae was a city in the Etruscan dodecapoli (League of the Twelve Cities), located furthest from Rome. The deity depicted on the obverse is Culsans, the two-faced divine protector of thresholds, a name derived from the Etruscan word "culs" meaning door. Culsans shares similarities with the Roman Janus, both being gods of gates and doorways, as well as with the Etruscan deities Selvans, god of sacred boundaries, and Culsu, goddess of the entrance to the underworld. The presence of several still-standing Etruscan city gates in modern Volterra serves as a testament to the city's early alliance with Rome and its strategic defensive position on the hills above the river Arno.

https://coins.ha.com/itm/ancients/greek/ancients-etruria-volaterrae-ca-230-220-bc-ae-aes-grave-as-58mm-12593-gm-3h-vf/a/3115-32005.s?type=DA-DMC-CoinArchives-WorldCoins-3115-05082024

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