
Cleveland Museum of Art
Tetradrachm: Head of Apollo (obverse); Lion (reverse)
- Date
- c. 334–323 BCE
- Medium
- silver
- 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. The lion and star on the reverse connect to the sun god, Apollo, on the obverse.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Tetradrachm: Head of Apollo (obverse); Head of Lion (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Drachm: Forepart of Lion (obverse); Head of Aphrodite (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Drachm: Forepart of Lion (obverse); Head of Aphrodite (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Stater: Head of Athena (obverse); Lion (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Hemidrachm: Chimaera (obverse); Dove (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Tetradrachm: Head of Apollo, l., laureate (obverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Tetradrachm: Lion (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Tetradrachm: Head of Young Herakles (obverse); Zeus (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Tetradrachm: Head of Young Herakles (obverse); Zeus (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Tetradrachm: Head of Lion, Barley, Riverfish (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Stater: Lion (obverse); Incuse Punches (reverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Tetradrachm: Head of Apollo, laureate (obverse)
Cleveland Museum of Art