Banner Naumann 171
Rare Sebennyte Nome
Dritto moneta
Dritto
Lot # 290
EGYPT. Alexandria. Domitian (81-96). Ae Hemidrachm. Sebennyte nome (Lower Egypt). Dated RY 12 (AD 91/2).

Obv: ΑΥΤ ΚΑΙϹ ΘЄΟ(Υ) ΥΙΟϹ ΔΟΜΙΤ ϹЄΒ ΓЄΡΜ.
Laureate head right.
Rev: ϹΕΒΕΝΝΥΤΗϹ ΝΟΜΟϹ / L - IB (date).
Ares standing left, holding spear and parazonium; at feet, goat standing left.

RPC II 2779A (1 specimen); Dattari -.

Extremely rare

Egypt was structured into districts called ‘nomoi’, territories that orbited around a main city, united by the worship of a specific local divinity. Each nome had its own main god and often generated antagonism with the gods of neighboring districts, often giving rise to fierce enmities and fights. Only three Egyptian cities were outside the nomes: Alexandria, Naucratis, and Ptolemais. This system dated back to the Pharaonic period and continued until Roman times, undergoing changes in the number and names of the districts. Under Alexander the Great, an Egyptian nomarch remained at the head of the nome, but from the early Ptolemies onwards, he was replaced by a Greek military governor (strategos). In Roman times, between Domitian and Marcus Aurelius, a series of coins was struck that reproduced the ‘nomoi’ with different personifications, accompanied by the image or distinctive sign of the sacred animal peculiar to each district, or by the statue of the main deity worshipped in the district.

Condition: Fine.

Weight: 10.44 g.
Diameter: 28 mm.

Estimate: € 100
Watch:
Starting price: € 80
Current bid: € 80
B.P.: 18.90%
Closing on: 2026-08-02 16:00:00 Roma time