A beautiful ancient Punic electrum stater from the famous city of Carthage, struck circa 300 B.C. in Carthage
A beautiful ancient Punic electrum (a gold/silver alloy) stater from the famous city of Carthage, struck circa 300 B.C. in Carthage.
The obverse with a superb portrait of the chief goddess of Carthage, Tanit, shown facing left, wearing earing and necklace, her hair tied up with grain wreath.
The reverse with horse standing facing right.
Carthage, one of the great cities of antiquity, was ideally located on the North African coast in modern day Tunisia. Her position enabled her to become a powerful and influential city-state. Embodied, at one point, by one of history's greatest military leaders, Hannibal. Carthage was eventually completely destroyed in 146 B.C. by the Romans after a series of enormous battles known as the Punic wars.
This beautiful coin shows the city's chief deity, Tanit on the obverse while the reverse depicts the iconic Carthaginian horse.
A beautiful coin type struck by one of humanity's great lost civilizations.
Diameter: 18 mm. Weight: 8.60 g.
Provenance: Ex. UK Private collection. artancientltd