Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3

Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3Under the emperor Decius the Lydian town of Philadelphia used the foundation of its identity-establishing main cult by Orestes, Iphigenia and Pylades as the theme for one of its coins, which propagated its homonoia with Ephesos. The first article...

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Main Author: Johannes Nollé
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Akdeniz University 2005-05-01
Series:Gephyra
Subjects:
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Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/18370/193948?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahin
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spelling doaj-e204676a2be0412fbbc935de5d60cece2020-11-25T01:40:10ZdeuAkdeniz UniversityGephyra1309-39242651-50592005-05-0127394324Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3Johannes NolléContributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3Under the emperor Decius the Lydian town of Philadelphia used the foundation of its identity-establishing main cult by Orestes, Iphigenia and Pylades as the theme for one of its coins, which propagated its homonoia with Ephesos. The first article looks into the background to this homonoia connection based on the family relationship of the Philadel­phian cult founders with the founder of the Ephesian sanctuary, Agamemnon. Dealing with Apollo Hikesios, who appears on coins from several Ephesian issues, the second article shows that the epiklesis aims to represent Apollo as the first suppliant seeking protection at the Ephesian asylum sanctuary and thus as the founder of the Ephesian asylum. The third article is concerned with a Lycian silver coin from Araxa dating from the early 4th century BC and sporting the bust of a godly queen with a diadem. Evidence is adduced which suggests a) that this is the picture of the Lycian Mother of Gods and not of Leto, whose cult was only being introduced at about that time by the Xanthian dynast Arbinas, and b) that the belief of Leto's delivery in Araxa, attested by evidence from the 3rd and 4th centuries AD, arose only in the High Hellenistic period during the heyday of Homeric philology at Alexandria and the Ptolemaic rule over Lycia.https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/18370/193948?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahin---
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johannes Nollé
spellingShingle Johannes Nollé
Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3
Gephyra
-
-
-
author_facet Johannes Nollé
author_sort Johannes Nollé
title Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3
title_short Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3
title_full Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3
title_fullStr Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3
title_full_unstemmed Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3
title_sort contributions to anatolian history and numismatics 1-3
publisher Akdeniz University
series Gephyra
issn 1309-3924
2651-5059
publishDate 2005-05-01
description Contributions to Anatolian History and Numismatics 1-3Under the emperor Decius the Lydian town of Philadelphia used the foundation of its identity-establishing main cult by Orestes, Iphigenia and Pylades as the theme for one of its coins, which propagated its homonoia with Ephesos. The first article looks into the background to this homonoia connection based on the family relationship of the Philadel­phian cult founders with the founder of the Ephesian sanctuary, Agamemnon. Dealing with Apollo Hikesios, who appears on coins from several Ephesian issues, the second article shows that the epiklesis aims to represent Apollo as the first suppliant seeking protection at the Ephesian asylum sanctuary and thus as the founder of the Ephesian asylum. The third article is concerned with a Lycian silver coin from Araxa dating from the early 4th century BC and sporting the bust of a godly queen with a diadem. Evidence is adduced which suggests a) that this is the picture of the Lycian Mother of Gods and not of Leto, whose cult was only being introduced at about that time by the Xanthian dynast Arbinas, and b) that the belief of Leto's delivery in Araxa, attested by evidence from the 3rd and 4th centuries AD, arose only in the High Hellenistic period during the heyday of Homeric philology at Alexandria and the Ptolemaic rule over Lycia.
topic -
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url https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/18370/193948?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahin
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