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Auction Name: 2026 January 12 NYINC World & Ancient Coins Platinum Session and Signature® Auction - New York

Lot Number: 34003

Shortcut to Lot: HA.com/3129*34003

SICULO-PUNIC. Sicily. Entella. Ca. 320-300 BC. AR tetradrachm (26mm, 16.79 gm, 3h). NGC AU★ 4/5 - 4/5, hairlines. Mem issue. Head of Arethusa left, wreathed with reeds, wearing pearl necklace and triple drop pendant earring; four dolphins swimming around, pellet behind, dotted border / M (Punic), horse head left; palm tree with two clusters of dates behind, linear border. Glendining Lockett 959 (this coin). Jenkins 242. Cerulean and amber highlights on nicely detailed dies.

Ex World-Wide Coins of California, Auction VI (21 February 1985), lot 7(?); Naville Ars Classica XIV (2 July 1929), lot 151.

The location of the main Carthaginian mint in Sicily identified by Punic inscription as "The Camp" has long been a matter of conjecture and dispute. Recent research, adopted by Oliver Hoover in his Handbook of Coins of Sicily (CNG 2012), suggests the "Camp" mint to have been Entella, a fortress-like city located in central-west Sicily. Founded by the Trojans in the 500s BC, Entella was conquered by a group of Campanian mercenaries in about 410 BC who quickly sold their services to the Carthaginians (alternatively, the Campanians might have been employed by Carthage before they took the city). The city remained a Punic stronghold through most of the fourth century, although the Syracusan tyrant Timoleon briefly drove them out circa 342 BC (a peace treaty dividing Sicily, into Greek and Carthaginian spheres of interest in 338 BC, returned Entella to Punic control). The Siculo-Punic coinage of Entella seems to have been intended mainly to pay mercenary soldiers who were used to being paid in Greek coin, as the silver tetradrachms adhere closely to the Attic weight standard. Designs were usually based on the ubiquitous issues of Syracuse (obverse), but with reverses displaying their Carthaginian allegiance (the palm tree, phonix in Greek, is likely a canting pun on the term Phoenician). Horses also feature prominently, likely referring to the outstanding cavalry of the Carthaginians and their Campanian allies.

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