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A pair of early 20th Century wing back armchairs in the Georgian taste with red leather button back upholstery CONDITION REPORTS Height of seat approx 42 cm, one seat missing. One chair in particular with damage to the leather and various cracks, possibly had been attacked by a cat. Variosu rips, puncture marks, claw marks, assorted damage etc. Second chair has some wear, cracks to the leather, extreme wear to one of the hand rests. Bottom appears to be dipped slightly. Assorted damage to the legs, various knocks, nibbles, scratches etc throughout. The seat of one chair is missing. Various general signs of wear and tear throughout. In need of some attention.
A late Victorian buttoned leather upholstered Chesterfield sofa on turned legs to brass caps and castors CONDITION REPORTS Leather worn especially to the seat part. Some rips, signs of repairs. In our opinion possibly not original leather but still has age to it. Massive repair to the front section. Various scratches, scuffs, marks etc throughout. General signs of wear and tear. Assorted buttons missing, various considerable signs of wear and tear, in need of attention
A William IV rosewood card table, the rounded rectangular fold-over top with moulded edge, opening to reveal a baize-lined interior over a foliate and floral decorated frieze, raised on an octagonal baluster column to platform base and lion's paw feet and castors, together with a Victorian walnut framed low salon chair with buttoned spoon back and upholstered seat on turned and fluted front legs CONDITION REPORTS Various scratches and impressed marks all over especially visible to the top. Somer small chips and losses to the decorative moulding, veneer cracking in places. All over various scratches, impressed marks, small chips etc throughout. Staining to the green baize. Top is slightly warped. Approx 92.5 cm wide. General signs of wear and tear throughout, Slight warping to the top
Kingdom of Macedon, Alexander III 'the Great' AR Tetradrachm. Pella, circa 323-317 BC. Head of Herakles left, wearing lion skin headdress / Zeus Aëtophoros seated left on throne, holding sceptre; Θ below seat, AΛEΞANΔPOY to right. Price 213; Moore 10–17; Demanhur 1601-3. 17.24g, 26mm, 9h. Near Extremely Fine. Extremely Rare. A superb example of a left facing Alexander tetradrachm. Ex Roma Numismatics VIII, 28 September 2014, lot 412; Ex private European collection formed c.1990s.
Karia, Halikarnassos AR Tetradrachm. Circa 400-387 BC. Head of Apollo facing slightly right / AΛIKAPNAΣΣEΩN, eagle standing to right, with wings spread, star to right; all within shallow incuse square. Cf. S. Hurter, ‘42 Tetradrachmen von Klazomenai’, SNR 45, 1966, p. 45, pl. VI, F = Lorber, Amphipolis, the Civic Coinage in Silver and Gold, 1990, pl. IV, fig 21 = The New York Sale XXVII, 533; Gemini XIII, 80 (same dies); Roma XIII, 328 (same dies). 15.24g, 21.5mm, 12h. Extremely Fine. Of the highest rarity; one of only five known tetradrachms of Halikarnassos, and one of just three of this type. Ex Triton XX, 10 January 2017, lot 303. A single example of this important tetradrachm type was published in 1966 by S. Hurter (‘42 Tetradrachmen von Klazomenai’, SNR 45, 1966, p. 45, pl. VI, F) which for over half a century remained the only known example to have survived. Four further examples, including this coin, recently came to light, which though clearly from the same issue, bear different control marks (sunburst or serpent, not bow). Numismatists have however been aware of the coinage series as a whole for quite some time; approximately 34 drachms are known to exist, along with 3 hemidrachms (see the preceding lot), yet it is remarkable that so few of the larger denomination survived. Originally thought to have been struck after the satrap Maussolos moved the capital of the satrapy of Karia from the Hekatomnid ancestral seat of Mylasa to Halikarnassos, the dating of the Hecatomnus hoard disproves this notion. This coinage therefore most likely represents a civil issue of Halikarnassos struck prior to the King’s Peace of 387 BC, when virtually all civil coinages of the Greek states in Asia Minor ceased. Certainly, despite the city having been firmly aligned with Persia in the days of Artemisia in the early fifth century, her grandson Lygdamis II brought the city into the Delian League and the city was, for an uncertain period of time, independent of Persian rule. It is tempting therefore to view this type as a product of the turbulent early years of the fourth century, when the Athenian general Thrasyboulos, in response to renewed conflict with Sparta, began re-establishing Athenian alliances with the cities in Asia Minor that had previously been allies. If this issue, evidently intended to be a reasonably substantial one considering that at least two die pairs existed, was begun in circa 389-387 and cut short by the reassertion of Persian influence in 387, this would explain the relative rarity of this series today. That the obverse of this coinage was heavily influenced by the Rhodian facing-head coinage that had been recently introduced is clear. That it was retained by the Hekatomnid satraps as the obverse type of their coinage once the move from Mylasa to Halikarnassos was complete is also evident, but more difficult to explain. Relegating his father’s obverse of Zeus Labraundos to the reverse while doing away entirely with the lion motif may have been nothing more than political expedient aimed at cultivating goodwill, but perhaps it may also reflect the distinct thread of philhellenism that ran through the Hekatomnid family.
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