Ancient Archaic Period - 500-400 BCE Achaemenid Persian Empire AV Daric Choice XF
This coin is a Persian Daric, a gold coin which, along with the silver Siglos, represents the bimetal coinage of its era. Cyrus the Great introduced coins to the Persian Empire after 546 BC. It was Darius I (521-486 BC) who introduced a thick gold coin with a standard weight of 8.4 grams that equaled the value of 20 silver coins. The Daric presents an image of the Persian king holding a bow in his left hand and a spear in his right. He appears to be wearing a crown upon his head. The gold employed for striking these coins was high grade: it had a purity of 95.83 percent.
Crowned head of Darius I at Behistun.
The coin is mentioned in the Jewish bible, in which it is called the “adarkonim” when the Israelites had contact with it when their Babylonian captors were conquered by Persia. It is mentioned in the first Book of Chronicles when King David asks a group of people to make donation for construction of the Temple. Those people gave generously and included “ten thousands darics of gold” in their donations. It is also mentioned in Ezra 8:27. Also, a derivative Greek word, “darkemonium” is used in Ezra 2:69 and three times in Nehemiah &:70-72.
Grading Service | NONE |
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Year of Issue | NONE |
Grade | NONE |
Ancient Year Range | 5th C. BC |
Denom Type | N/A |
Numeric Denomination | AV Daric |
Mint Location | NONE |
Designation | NONE |
Circ/UnCirc | Not Specified |
Strike Type | N/A |
Holder Variety | Strike 5/5; Surface 4/5 |
Grade Add On | NONE |
Holder Type | N/A |