Posted on 08/13/2005 11:44:21 AM PDT by blam
GGG Ping.
The years around 450 BC were very active for the citizens of Athens. They commonly let 'allies' send money if they had it rather than troops and ships.
There are houses at the foot of the acropolis which have roads that are still in use and date further back. You can literally walk down a street that existed before christ was born.
The bottom row of the picture has coins with an owl on them - these must be the coins of Athens republic proper. Upper row coins with some faces on them must be of the later period.
What an incredible thing that is.
I wonder how much those coins are worth today? I am not talking about the real value by weight of the silver by the value as historical items.
And if you go to Jerusalem, you can walk down the SAME streets that Christ walked down.
Any dated 500 BC?
Probably the best evidence yet that lawyers and politicians were around in 500 B.C.
500 bc.
Possibly hidden to keep them out of the hands of the Persians when Xerxes burned the city.
Wonder what might have happened to the owners as they never reclaimed their coins!
Value?Would be nice to have one,wouldn't it?Having a coin that was used in ancient times?I'll bet they won't be cheap.I've seen Roman coins for sale,very reasonably priced.Did some research on the net.I was very surprised.Apparently Rome cranked out a lot of coins,esp lesser value denominations that still turn up.
ahhh those must be the NEW streets.
;-)
The whole CITY is ontop of an archeological dig.
Some of the modern buildings literally have glass sidewalks to allow the public to see the archeological buildings below. (the Athens Stock Exchange for one)
The Athens metro was YEARS behind schedule because of "dig, dig, dig, stop, study, excavate, dig, dig,stop, study, excavate,dig, stop, study, excavate, dig, (repeat...)
You really should wonder how much of this stuff is in private hands because somebody was doing something in their back yards.
These are Athenian tetradrachms. The head is Athena and the 'tail' is the owl, her symbol. These coins were the trade dollars of their time. Beautiful examples may go for $1000 or so, but you can get a nice one for $400. A bit high for my price range.
Roman coins--little coppers dime to penny sized can be had for $1 or so. A project I do with my 8th graders involves cleaning and identifying Roman coins. I get them (nice ones) for $2 each.
That sounds great. I wonder of the kids appreciate they are handling something was used 1500 to 2000 years ago?
I can't afford to buy any either, just wondering of the value. Thanks for the information.
That's right! I was fascinated to read a Roman's account of his trip to the pyramids in Egypt. The pyramids were as ancient to him as he is to us. It was a wonderful tag-team through history.
Just check out the shops in Russell Square across from the Bristish Museum in London. Plenty of it for sale there.
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