(24) Skione, Macedon (Greece) - AR tetradrachm, c. 500-480 B.C.,
16.20 g. (inv.93.002).
Obverse: Helmeted head of Protesilaos r.; on crest-holder,
retrograde: Protesilaos.
Reverse: In incuse square, stern of ship; in corners: Skione
abbreviated.
Provenance: Harlan Berk, 1993.
Bibliography: C.M. Kraay, Archaic and Classical Greek
Coins (Berkeley and Los Angeles 1976) 134.
Skione was the chief town of Pallene, one of the three promontories of the
Macedonian peninsula of Chalkidike. Like the other cities in the area, it
was probably settled by Euboians, but its inhabitants believed that it was
founded by one of the heroes of the Trojan War. The city is chiefly remembered
for its resistance to Athens during the Peloponnesian War, after which the
Athenians put the inhabitants to death.
On the obverse is the head of Protesilaos, according to tradition the heroic
founder of the city. He wears an Attic helmet with his name, only partly
legible on this coin, inscribed backward on its crest-holder. The stern
of a ship on the reverse probably also refers to the hero. He was the leader
of warriors from several Thessalian towns who fought in the Trojan War.
According to one tradition, he knew that the first man ashore would be killed
and heroically became the first man to leap off his ship. He is best known
for the stories about his wife's love and mourning for him.
C.L.L.
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