Alexander the Great Tetradrachm Pendant

Item #4956
$2,900.00

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  • Obverse: Hercules in Lion Skin
  • Reverse: Zeus Enthroned with Eagle
  • Date: 325 - 324 BC Lifetime Issue. Grade: Good Very Fine
  • Mint: Myriandros, Asia Minor
  • Silver Tetradrachm Coin in 14k Gold Pendant, Weight 24g
  • Framed Coin Size: 28mm Diameter, with 6.5mm Bail Opening for Necklace
  • Size Chart with mm to inches Conversions

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Description:

This Alexander the Great coin was minted during his lifetime in the ancient city of Myriandros, located along the Mediterranean Sea in present day southern Turkey. Tutored by Aristotle in his youth, Alexander succeeded his murdered father King Philip II in 336 BC, inheriting a strong kingdom and an experienced army. He took full advantage and in 334 BC, Alexander attacked and defeated the Persian forces at the Battle of the Granicus. Alexander then marched his army south along the coast, liberating this Greek Asia Minor region from the Persians. In November 333 BC, Alexander led his Macedonian troops against King Darius and the Persians in the Battle of Issos, which was a decisive Macedonian victory.
By the time of his death in 323 BC, Alexander had overthrown the Persian King Darius III and conquered the entirety of his empire. Alexander's own empire stretched from the Adriatic Sea to Egypt and as far east as the Indus River in India. His legacy lived on long after him, ushering in centuries of Greek settlement and Hellenistic culture over distant areas.
The obverse of this coin, shows the Greek hero Hercules wearing a lion’s skin of armor. This was important to Alexander's hereditary line as he claimed to be descended from the mythological hero. The reverse shows Zeus, the king of the Greek gods, seated on a throne and holding an eagle. Zeus was the most powerful of all the Greek gods and his appearance on Alexander's coinage symbolized Alexander's status as leader of all the Greeks.