
Cleveland Museum of Art
Stater: Lion (obverse); Incuse Punches (reverse)
- Date
- 600–550 BCE
- Medium
- Electrum (gold-silver alloy)
- Culture
- Greek, minted at Miletos (Ionia)
- Department
- Greek and Roman Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
The lion, king of the beasts and an animal associated with regal and heroic power, featured prominently on the coinage of many ancient Greek city-states. Artists placed the lion in a variety of poses, sometimes including the whole body, at other times the foreparts or just the head. Although it may once have roamed nearby, for many Greeks the lion was a monster nearly as exotic as the Chimaera, of which it formed a part, together with a goat head and snake-headed tail. Many early Greek coins are made from electrum, a naturally occurring alloy of gold and silver.
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