The Phanes coins, so called for the name inscribed on them, are early
electrum coins from
Caria in
Asia Minor and are the most ancient inscribed coin series at present known.
Coins
The Phanes coins are a series of
electrum coins issued in seven denominations:
stater, 1/3, 1/6, 1/12, 1/24, 1/48, and 1/96 stater. The staters weigh 14.1 grams. All of the coins have the image of a stag or part of a stag on them.[1] The coins were likely struck at
Ephesus.[2]
The stater and 1/3 stater coins from this series both bear Greek inscriptions.[1] The inscriptions are written right-to-left, and the letters are the mirror image of standard Greek letters.[3] The longer inscription, on the stater, survives in three versions, which read: ΦΑΕΝΟΣ ΕΜΙ ΣHΜΑ ("Phaenos emi sema"), ΦΑΝΟΣ ΕΜΙ ΣHΜΑ ("Phanos emi sema"), and ΦΑΝΕΟΣ ΕΙΜΙ ("Phaneos eimi").[1] This may be translated as "I am the badge/mark/symbol of Phanes" or "I am the sign of the bright one".[4][a] The shorter legend, on the 1/3 stater coins, is ΦΑΝΕΟΣ ("Phaneos", meaning "of Phanes").[1]
The coins of Phanes are amongst the earliest of Greek coins. One, a
hemihekte (a twelfth
stater) of the issue, was found in a jar in the foundations of the
Temple of Artemis at
Ephesus dated to the late seventh century BC, making that the earliest known hoard of coins.[6] Only six specimens of the stater are known.[7]
Identity of Phanes
Phanes cannot be identified with certainty. He might have been the successful mercenary
Phanes of Halicarnassus, described by
Herodotus as serving first the Egyptian pharaoh
Amasis II and then the Persian king
Cambyses II in his invasion of Egypt.[8] The coins might be associated with the primeval god
Phanes, whose name means "light" or "shine", or that might have been an epithet of the local goddess identified with Artemis.
Barclay V. Head found those suggestions unlikely and thought it more probably "the name of some prominent citizen of Ephesus".[9]
Notes
^"a vocabulary very close to the inscriptions on seals. A sixth century scarab had already an Archaic Greek inscription reading : "I am the sema of Thersis""[5]
References
^
abcdMeadows, Andrew (2021). "Local Scripts on Archaic Coins: Distribution and Function". In Parker, Robert; Steele, Philippa M. (eds.). The Early Greek Alphabet: Origin, Diffusion, Uses. Oxford University Press. p. 191.
^Jeffrey, L. H. (1961). The Local Scripts of Archaic Greece (Revised ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 378.