Serpentarium Mundi by Alexei Alexeev The Ancient Ophidian Iconography Resource (Mundus Vetus, 3000 BC - 650 AD)
Search Functionality Demonstration
  SCULPTURES & RELIEFS ADORNMENTS & TOOLS COINS VASES PAINTINGS & MOSAICS MANUSCRIPTS
Figure 065 of 090 Figure 067 of 090
Figure III-2-aga-066. Goddess Isis-Thermuthis as rearing uraeus hooded cobra, wearing double-feathers and disc crown, holding sistrum in its coils and facing rearing Agathodaemon serpent, wearing pschent (sekhemti) crown and holding kerykeion (caduceus) in its coils, palm frond in exergue.

Item: Material: Denomination
(view):
Mint: Issuer/Authority: Historical Period,
Date:
Collection:
A. Bronze Drachm
(reverse)
Alexandria,
Egypt
Philip the Arab
(r. 244-249 AD)
Roman Imperial,
248-249 AD
Private
B. Bronze Drachm
(reverse)
Alexandria,
Egypt
Philip the Arab
(r. 244-249 AD)
Roman Imperial,
247-248 AD
American Numismatic Society, New York

Source-Image(s): American Numismatic Society, MANTIS (www.numismatics.org; © American Numismatic Society): B (1944.100.67159); Ancient Coins Search (www.acsearch.info; © ACSearch.info and the original holders): A (Classical Numismatic Group, Electronic Auction 382, 7 September 2016, Lot 327). The representative scale is not universal. The full list of numismatic and exonumic images' sources is available on the Coins introductory page.

● Page Publishing Patron: Anonymous Benefactor (will change to your name after the page's adoption).
Donate Resource Suggest Artefact Report Error Leave Feedback Ask Question Offer Partnership
Share this page:   Serpentarium Mundi on Social Media: Serpentarium Mundi on FacebookSerpentarium Mundi on TwitterSerpentarium Mundi on Google+Serpentarium Mundi on InstagramSerpentarium Mundi on PinterestSerpentarium Mundi on YouTube