vince76
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THE MYSTERY OF THE ILLYRIAN COWS — Illyrian
Coinage in Thrace
Mac Congail
„not content with making incursions merely into the neighbouring provinces of Thessaly
and Dalmatia, (they) penetrated as far as the Adriatic; checked by the boundary which it
formed, since nature apparently stayed their advance, they hurled their weapons against
the very waters‟.
One of the mysteries which has attracted the attention of archaeologists in southeastern
Europe over the last decades has been the appearance of large amounts of Illyrian
coinage from the Adriatic cities of Apollonia and Dyrrhachium (Epidamnus) in hoards
from Serbia and northern Bulgaria dating from the frist decades of the 1st c. BC. While
the appearance of these coins in the Balkan interior has remained hitherto unexplained,
a review of the larger geo-political picture in the region during this period reveals
exactly how and when these issues reached the Balkan interior and Danubian region,
and provides archaeological confirmation of events which have until now only been
known from ancient sources.
THE HOARDS
The cities of Apollonia and Dyrrhachium (Epidamnus) were established in the Archaic
period by Corcyra and her mother city Corinth on the eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea,
in the Illyrian lands to the north of Epirus. When the Illyrian and Macedonian
kingdoms threatened their prosperity in the last third of the 3rd century BC, they
turned to the Romans for military support and subsequently assumed the privileged
status of a Roman protectorate. As early as 228 BC
these two Adriatic cities concluded an alliance with the Roman Republic. They served
as Adriatic naval bases for the Republic and soon became centres of Roman operations
in the interior of the Balkans. Essentially, the late drachms of Apollonia and
Dyrrhachium were Roman controlled issues.
From the 3rd to the 1st century BC both cities issued the same type of smaller silver
drachms, with the representation of a cow suckling her calf and the name of one
magistrate in the nominative case on the obverse, and a double stellate or foral pattern
in a double square and the name of another magistrate in the genitive case on the
reverse (Fig. 1).
In the present context of most interest is the heavy concentration of drachms of
Dyrrhachium and Apollonia to be observed in the territories of the Celtic Scordisci (in
modern Serbia and Bulgaria). Some 30 hoards have been published from Serbia, and
another 38 deposits from Northwestern and North-Central Bulgaria in the Vidin,
Vratza, Montana, Pleven, Lovech and Gabrovo regions (Ujes Morgan D. 1st Century BC
Drachms of Appolonia and Dyrrhachium in the Territory of the Scordisci.
A number of ‘barbarous’ imitations of Dyrrhachium and Apollonia and hybrid coins
also appear in the hoards, and archaeological evidence for local imitation of Dyrrhachium drachms is recorded at the Zboryanovo cult and civic centre — near
Sveshtari in Razgrad region (Northeastern Bulgaria), where cast copies and a casting
mould was discovered (Dzanev G. and Prokopov I.
The chronology of the hoards from Thrace containing Dyrrhachium and Appollonia
drachms runs from the late 80’s to circa 60 BC, for example the hoards from northern
Bulgaria such as those from Galatin
Epidamnos-Dyrrhachium, Illyria. AR Drachm 18mm, 3.39 g. Arkephron and Asklapos,
magistrates. ARCEFRWN, Cow standing left, suckling calf standing right; grain ear to right,
bunch of grapes below / ASKLAPOU, Double stellate pattern. BMC 42
So what sequence of events brought such a large quantity of coins from the Adriatic to the
Danube at the beginning of the 1st c. BC ?
In fact, the link between the Balkan Celts and the Adriatic coast, and the circumstances
which led to large amounts of these ‘Illyrian’ and other Roman issues reaching the
territory of the Celts in Serbia and Bulgaria is well documented in Roman sources (See
also ‘Damnatio Memoriae’ article).
By the beginning of the 1st c. BC the Roman forces on the Balkans were feeling the
strain of the apparently endless barbarian attacks from the north. In 90 BC the dam
finally burst and, confronted by yet another Celtic/Maidi attack, the Roman borders
disintegrated (on these events see ‘The Scordisci Wars’ article). The events which followed
are described by the Roman historian Florus (Epitome of Roman History XXXVIIII, iii,
4). The Celtic tribes, now joined by the Maidi and Denteletes, as well as the Dardanii
tribes, swarmed through Macedonia, Thessaly and Dalmatia, even reaching the Adriatic
coast. According to the Roman historian:
“Throughout their advance they left no cruelty untried, as they vented their fury on their
prisoners; they sacrificed to their gods with human blood; they drank out of human skulls;by every kind of insult inflicted by burning and fumigation they made death more foul;
they even forced infants from their mother‟s wombs by torture”.
In this litany of evil atrocities committed by their enemies, special mention is reserved
by the Romans for the Celts — “The cruelest of all the Thracians were the Scordisci, and
to their strength was added cunning as well” (loc cit.).
While much of the above account may be put down to Roman hysteria and
exaggeration, it is clear that from 90 BC onwards the empire had lost de facto control
over large parts of the Balkans and northern Greece. By 88 BC, i.e. 2 years after the
collapse of the Roman borders in Macedonia, the Scordisci and their allies had swept
through northern Greece and reached Dodona in Epirus, where they destroyed the
temple of Zeus. By the winter of 85/84 BC they had penetrated as far as Delphi, where
the most sacred of Greek temples was once again destroyed (see ‘The Scordisci Wars’
article).
As mentioned, during the course of these attacks/raids we are specifically told that the
‘barbarians’ also reached the Adriatic coast (in Adriaticum mare usque venerunt), and it
is exactly in the wake of these events that Illyrian coinage from the Adriatic cities of
Appolonia and Dyrrhachium begins to appear in hoards in Scordisci territory in Serbia
and northern Bulgaria, thus indicating that it reached this area of the Balkan interior
and the Danube region as a direct result of the historically recorded Celtic campaigns
against the Romans in the western Balkans in the 2nd decade of the 1st c. BC.
Coinage in Thrace
Mac Congail
„not content with making incursions merely into the neighbouring provinces of Thessaly
and Dalmatia, (they) penetrated as far as the Adriatic; checked by the boundary which it
formed, since nature apparently stayed their advance, they hurled their weapons against
the very waters‟.
One of the mysteries which has attracted the attention of archaeologists in southeastern
Europe over the last decades has been the appearance of large amounts of Illyrian
coinage from the Adriatic cities of Apollonia and Dyrrhachium (Epidamnus) in hoards
from Serbia and northern Bulgaria dating from the frist decades of the 1st c. BC. While
the appearance of these coins in the Balkan interior has remained hitherto unexplained,
a review of the larger geo-political picture in the region during this period reveals
exactly how and when these issues reached the Balkan interior and Danubian region,
and provides archaeological confirmation of events which have until now only been
known from ancient sources.
THE HOARDS
The cities of Apollonia and Dyrrhachium (Epidamnus) were established in the Archaic
period by Corcyra and her mother city Corinth on the eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea,
in the Illyrian lands to the north of Epirus. When the Illyrian and Macedonian
kingdoms threatened their prosperity in the last third of the 3rd century BC, they
turned to the Romans for military support and subsequently assumed the privileged
status of a Roman protectorate. As early as 228 BC
these two Adriatic cities concluded an alliance with the Roman Republic. They served
as Adriatic naval bases for the Republic and soon became centres of Roman operations
in the interior of the Balkans. Essentially, the late drachms of Apollonia and
Dyrrhachium were Roman controlled issues.
From the 3rd to the 1st century BC both cities issued the same type of smaller silver
drachms, with the representation of a cow suckling her calf and the name of one
magistrate in the nominative case on the obverse, and a double stellate or foral pattern
in a double square and the name of another magistrate in the genitive case on the
reverse (Fig. 1).
In the present context of most interest is the heavy concentration of drachms of
Dyrrhachium and Apollonia to be observed in the territories of the Celtic Scordisci (in
modern Serbia and Bulgaria). Some 30 hoards have been published from Serbia, and
another 38 deposits from Northwestern and North-Central Bulgaria in the Vidin,
Vratza, Montana, Pleven, Lovech and Gabrovo regions (Ujes Morgan D. 1st Century BC
Drachms of Appolonia and Dyrrhachium in the Territory of the Scordisci.
A number of ‘barbarous’ imitations of Dyrrhachium and Apollonia and hybrid coins
also appear in the hoards, and archaeological evidence for local imitation of Dyrrhachium drachms is recorded at the Zboryanovo cult and civic centre — near
Sveshtari in Razgrad region (Northeastern Bulgaria), where cast copies and a casting
mould was discovered (Dzanev G. and Prokopov I.
The chronology of the hoards from Thrace containing Dyrrhachium and Appollonia
drachms runs from the late 80’s to circa 60 BC, for example the hoards from northern
Bulgaria such as those from Galatin
Epidamnos-Dyrrhachium, Illyria. AR Drachm 18mm, 3.39 g. Arkephron and Asklapos,
magistrates. ARCEFRWN, Cow standing left, suckling calf standing right; grain ear to right,
bunch of grapes below / ASKLAPOU, Double stellate pattern. BMC 42
So what sequence of events brought such a large quantity of coins from the Adriatic to the
Danube at the beginning of the 1st c. BC ?
In fact, the link between the Balkan Celts and the Adriatic coast, and the circumstances
which led to large amounts of these ‘Illyrian’ and other Roman issues reaching the
territory of the Celts in Serbia and Bulgaria is well documented in Roman sources (See
also ‘Damnatio Memoriae’ article).
By the beginning of the 1st c. BC the Roman forces on the Balkans were feeling the
strain of the apparently endless barbarian attacks from the north. In 90 BC the dam
finally burst and, confronted by yet another Celtic/Maidi attack, the Roman borders
disintegrated (on these events see ‘The Scordisci Wars’ article). The events which followed
are described by the Roman historian Florus (Epitome of Roman History XXXVIIII, iii,
4). The Celtic tribes, now joined by the Maidi and Denteletes, as well as the Dardanii
tribes, swarmed through Macedonia, Thessaly and Dalmatia, even reaching the Adriatic
coast. According to the Roman historian:
“Throughout their advance they left no cruelty untried, as they vented their fury on their
prisoners; they sacrificed to their gods with human blood; they drank out of human skulls;by every kind of insult inflicted by burning and fumigation they made death more foul;
they even forced infants from their mother‟s wombs by torture”.
In this litany of evil atrocities committed by their enemies, special mention is reserved
by the Romans for the Celts — “The cruelest of all the Thracians were the Scordisci, and
to their strength was added cunning as well” (loc cit.).
While much of the above account may be put down to Roman hysteria and
exaggeration, it is clear that from 90 BC onwards the empire had lost de facto control
over large parts of the Balkans and northern Greece. By 88 BC, i.e. 2 years after the
collapse of the Roman borders in Macedonia, the Scordisci and their allies had swept
through northern Greece and reached Dodona in Epirus, where they destroyed the
temple of Zeus. By the winter of 85/84 BC they had penetrated as far as Delphi, where
the most sacred of Greek temples was once again destroyed (see ‘The Scordisci Wars’
article).
As mentioned, during the course of these attacks/raids we are specifically told that the
‘barbarians’ also reached the Adriatic coast (in Adriaticum mare usque venerunt), and it
is exactly in the wake of these events that Illyrian coinage from the Adriatic cities of
Appolonia and Dyrrhachium begins to appear in hoards in Scordisci territory in Serbia
and northern Bulgaria, thus indicating that it reached this area of the Balkan interior
and the Danube region as a direct result of the historically recorded Celtic campaigns
against the Romans in the western Balkans in the 2nd decade of the 1st c. BC.
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