Skip to main content
Go to accessibility options
Important Buyer’s Premium Change Notice: Please note that for all World Coins auctions closing after January 1st, 2026, the Buyer's Premium is 22% (minimum $29). Please direct any inquiries to 214-409-1150 or Bid@HA.com.

Description

JUDAEA. Jewish War (AD 66-70). AR shekel (24mm, 13.45 gm, 11h). NGC Choice VF 5/5 - 4/5, brushed. Jerusalem, dated Year 1 (May (or later) AD 66-March AD 67). Shekel of Israel (Paleo-Hebrew), ritual chalice with smooth rim, pellet on either side of bowl; Year One above / Jerusalem the Holy (Paleo-Hebrew), staff with three pomegranate buds and globular base. GBC 6, 6383. Flashy surfaces on a light dove gray flan.

After decades of abuses heaped by the Romans upon the denizens of Judaea, the Jews were ripe for revolt. In AD 66, the Procurator Gessius Florus summarily seized 16 talents of silver from the Jerusalem temple. A massive protest by the citizens brought a typically brutal Roman response and more than 3,000 Jews were slain. Pleas for calm by the client King Agrippa II fell on deaf ears as the city and countryside rose in full-scale revolt. Florus and the Roman garrison were driven from the city; an attempt by the legate of nearby Syria to put down the rebellion led to the loss of an entire Legion, XII Fulminata, and consternation in Rome. Once freed of the Romans, Jerusalem temple authorities began striking their own silver coinage - the first time that a sovereign Jewish government had done so.

The mint was likely located within the Temple complex and the silver provided by the stockpiles of Tyrian shekels kept in the treasury. Mintage was carefully controlled for weight, fineness and the legends each coin carried. The coins featured Jewish symbolism dating back centuries and slogans ("For the Freedom of Jerusalem" and "For the Redemption of Zion") that showed the leaders of the rebellion well understood how to use coins for mass communication. Workmanship in the manufacture of these thick shekels and half-shekels (smaller silver fractions were also struck in tiny numbers) was unusually high, given the wartime conditions under which they were created. Coins were dated to the year the revolt started; coins dated Year 1 (AD 66/7) are considered scarce, with about 120-150 recorded specimens; Years 2 and 3 (AD 67-69) are relatively common, with known examples in the low hundreds, Year 4 issues quite rare (about 40 known examples), and Year 5 (AD 70) the rarest of all, with a dozen "regular" issues and 14 of "irregular" shekels recorded.


Estimate: $6,000 - $8,000.

View Certification Details from NGC

Auction Info

Proxy Bidding Ends 
January
12th Monday 5:50 pm CT
Auction Dates
January
12th Monday
Proxy Bidding Time Remaining 
13 Days 16h 53m 29s
Bids + Registered Phone Bidders: 7
Lot Tracking Activity: 40
Page Views: 215

Buyer's Premium per Lot:
22% of the successful bid (minimum $29) per lot.

This lot is in: 5 - Signature® Floor Session - Platinum Session (Live Floor, Live Phone, Mail, Fax, Internet, and Heritage Live):
(Lots 34001-34318) - 6:00 PM Central Time, Monday, January 12, 2026 (7:00 PM Eastern Time).
[Proxy bidding ends ten minutes prior to the session start time. Live Proxy bidding on Heritage Live now starts within 2 hours of when the auction opens for proxy bidding and continues through the live session.]

Show All Session Information

Show Auction Type Info

Exhibition Viewing Times, Title Page, Floor Session and License Information

Additional Location Info:
InterContinental New York Barclay
111 East 48th Street
New York, NY 10017

Current Bid:
$4,300
Track Item