Is this a real coin?
This is being offered at auction on another site.
My question(s) are, is it real and if so what would be a good price?
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Thanks
My question(s) are, is it real and if so what would be a good price?

Thanks
Becoming informed but still trying to learn every day!
1-Dammit Boy Oct 14,2003
International Coins
"A work in progress"
Wayne
eBay registered name:
Hard_ Search (buyer/bidder, a small time seller)
e-mail: wayne.whatley@gmail.com
1-Dammit Boy Oct 14,2003
International Coins
"A work in progress"
Wayne
eBay registered name:
Hard_ Search (buyer/bidder, a small time seller)
e-mail: wayne.whatley@gmail.com
0
Comments
FOR SALE Items
If I remember right it was not going for what this fella has it started for on his auction.
1-Dammit Boy Oct 14,2003
International Coins
"A work in progress"
Wayne
eBay registered name:
Hard_ Search (buyer/bidder, a small time seller)
e-mail: wayne.whatley@gmail.com
Attica, Athens AR Tetradrachm. 330-310 BC. Helmeted Head of Athena right wearing round earring / AQE, owl standing right, head facing, wings closed; behind, spray of olive & crescent; all in incuse square.
Here is where I found the information:
Wildwinds site
then search for Svoronos 11 on that page.
Link to pictures
I hope this helps...
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Good sale to: Nicholasz219
1-Dammit Boy Oct 14,2003
International Coins
"A work in progress"
Wayne
eBay registered name:
Hard_ Search (buyer/bidder, a small time seller)
e-mail: wayne.whatley@gmail.com
Compared with most earlier Classical Owls, whose minting began c. 478 BC, Athena's hair on this and other "standardized" Classical Owls sweeps across her forehead in one series of parallel curves, the owl's head is straight and body long, and the owl's tail feathers end in a single prong rather than appearing as separately delineated feathers.
As on all Classical and Archaic Owls, Athena retains her archaic frontal, almond-shaped eye. This anachronism, which happened despite the introduction of perspective and realism on coins elsewhere in Greece at the time, was no doubt a deliberate means Athens used to retain the easy recognizability and acceptance of Owls as money throughout the known world and the profits it earned from minting them. As on other Classical Owls, Athena wears a pearl earring and necklace.
As with most Classical Owl tetradrachms, the horse-hair crest of Athena's helmet on this specimen is mostly off the flan, which is compact, too small for the coin's full design. Because of their relative rarity, full-crest Owls carry a substantial premium, though they're not necessarily more attractive. Athena can look top-heavy and off-balance, and the design can be truncated elsewhere, often the tip of Athena's nose or chin.
Athena wears an Attic (also called Athenian) helmet on Owls in contrast to a Corinthian helmet on, among other coins, Alexander the Great gold staters and Corinthian silver staters (there's longstanding debate over whether Corinthian staters depict Athena or Aphrodite, though the figure on these coins is typically referred to as Athena). In contrast to the Attic helmet depicted on Owls, the Corinthian helmet had a nose piece and relatively small openings for the eyes and mouth (better protection but poorer visibility and hearing). The Attic helmet had a hinged visor that's pulled up on Owls but could be dropped down for greater protection of the face during battle.
Among other coins depicting an Attic helmet are electrum staters of Kyzikos (Sear Greek 3478) and Seleukos I tetradrachms portraying Alexander/Seleukos I (Sear Greek 6833). Along with the Attic and Corinthian helmet, also depicted on ancient Greek and Roman coins is the Phrygian helmet, appearing on, for instance, coins of Velia (Sear Greek 455). Other helmets used in ancient Greece included the Illyrian, Chalcidian, Thracian, and Macedonian, among others.
Despite the popularity of standardized Classical Athenian Owls, their dating and attribution is one of the great underexplored areas of ancient numismatic scholarship. Chester Starr in 1970 called this area a "wasteland" and said a study of these coins, because of their sheer numbers, would be a "terrific labour." Nobody has yet undertaken it. Perhaps someone at the ANS or British Museum, with access to large numbers of specimens of these coins, will do this someday.
Standardized Owls are most commonly dated c. 449 to 413 BC, in the U.S. at least. That's how David Sear dated them in his standard 1978 reference Greek Coins and Their Values. He in turn based his dating on Chester Starr's 1970 book Athenian Coinage, 480-449 B.C. But not all dealers and auction houses date these coins this way, and some new hoard evidence has surfaced since Sear's 1978 book.
The 449 date comes from the Athenian Coinage Decree, which sought to force Athens' allies to use Athenian coins, weights and measures and which is thought to have occurred c. 449 BC (some scholars believe it occurred later). The 413 date comes from the cessation of income from Athenian allies and the Laurion silver mines that occurred near the end of the Peloponnesian War, which Athens lost to Sparta.
(cut and paste)
1-Dammit Boy Oct 14,2003
International Coins
"A work in progress"
Wayne
eBay registered name:
Hard_ Search (buyer/bidder, a small time seller)
e-mail: wayne.whatley@gmail.com
If genuine, taking the detail and strike into account and the lack of test cuts, probably $1500+
https://www.civitasgalleries.com
New coins listed monthly!
Josh Moran
CIVITAS Galleries, Ltd.
Young Numismatist ............................ and growing!
Attica, Athen: Klassisk UGLE 449 f.Kr
Which is Attica, Athens: Classic Owl, 449 BC. His starting (minimum bid) price is approx. $2400 US
Thanks for all the input folks. I am not after this coin, I just thoght it looked like a very high price
1-Dammit Boy Oct 14,2003
International Coins
"A work in progress"
Wayne
eBay registered name:
Hard_ Search (buyer/bidder, a small time seller)
e-mail: wayne.whatley@gmail.com
https://www.civitasgalleries.com
New coins listed monthly!
Josh Moran
CIVITAS Galleries, Ltd.