BERYTOS in PHOENICIA 218AD Satyr Marsyas Galley Ship Ancient Greek Coin i32533

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Item: i32533

 

Authentic Ancient

Coin of:

Greek city of Berytos in Phoenicia –

Bronze 9mm (0.46 grams) Struck circa 218-222 A.D.

Reference: SNGCop 89; BMC 27-35
. C-L to left and right of Marsyas standing left, holding wine-skin /
BER, Prow right.

You are bidding on the exact item pictured,

provided with a Certificate of Authenticity and Lifetime Guarantee of

Authenticity.

In
Greek mythology
, a satyr  is one of
a troop of male companions of
Pan
and
Dionysus
with

goat
-like (caprine) features, including a goat-tail, goat-like ears,
and sometimes a goat-like phallus. In Roman Mythology there is a similar concept
with goat-like features, the

faun
being half-man, half-goat. Greek-speaking Romans often use the
Greek term saturos when referring to the Latin faunus, and
eventually syncretize the two. The female “Satyresses
were a late invention of poets — that roamed the woods and mountains. In myths
they are often associated with pipe-playing.


File:Satyros Cdm Paris DeRidder509.jpg

The satyrs’ chief was
Silenus
, a minor deity associated (like
Hermes
and
Priapus
) with fertility. These characters can
be found in the only complete remaining
satyr play
, Cyclops, by
Euripides
, and the fragments of
Sophocles

Ichneutae
(Tracking Satyrs). The
satyr play was a short, lighthearted tailpiece performed after each trilogy of
tragedies in Athenian
festivals honoring Dionysus
. There is not
enough evidence to determine whether the satyr play regularly drew on the same
myths as those dramatized in the tragedies that preceded. The groundbreaking
tragic playwright
Aeschylus
is said to have been especially loved
for his satyr plays, but none of them have survived.

Attic painted vases
depict mature satyrs as
being strongly built with flat noses, large pointed ears, long curly hair, and
full beards
, with
wreaths
of vine or ivy circling their balding
heads. Satyrs often carry the
thyrsus
: the rod of
Dionysus
tipped with a pine cone.

Satyrs acquired their

goat
-like aspect through later Roman conflation with
Faunus
, a carefree
Italic
nature spirit of similar characteristics
and identified with the Greek god
Pan
. Hence satyrs are most commonly described
in Latin literature as having the upper half of a man and the lower half of a
goat, with a goat’s tail in place of the Greek tradition of horse-tailed satyrs;
therefore, satyrs became nearly identical with

fauns
. Mature satyrs are often depicted in Roman art with goat’s
horns
, while juveniles are often shown with
bony nubs on their foreheads.

About Satyrs, Praxiteles gives a new interpretation on the subject of free
and carefree life. Instead of an elf with pointed ears and repulsive goat
hooves, we face a child of nature, pure, but tame and fearless and brutal
instincts necessary to enable it to defend itself against threats, and survives
even without the help of modern civilization . Above all though, the Satyr with
flute has a small companion for him, shows the deep connection with nature, the
soft whistle of the wind, the sound of gurgling water of the crystal spring, the
birds singing, or perhaps the singing a melody of a human soul that feeds higher
feelings. As Dionysiac creatures they are lovers of wine and women, and they are
ready for every physical pleasure. They roam to the music of pipes (auloi),
cymbals
,
castanets
, and
bagpipes
, and they love to dance with the
nymphs
(with whom they are obsessed, and whom
they often pursue), and have a special form of dance called
sikinnis
. Because of their love of wine, they
are often represented holding wine cups, and they appear often in the
decorations on wine cups.

 

In Greek mythology
and art


This
Hellenistic
satyr wears a rustic
perizoma (loincloth)
and carries a pedum (shepherd’s crook).
Walters Art Museum
,
Baltimore
.


Satyr on a mountain goat, drinking with women, in a
Gandhara relief
of 2nd-4th century
CE


Dancing satyr on a
sardonyx

intaglio
holding a
thyrsus
in his left hand and a
kantharos
in the right hand. On the
right arm, the skin of a panther (pardalis). 1st century BC or
beginning of 1st century.

In earlier Greek art, satyrs appear as old and ugly, but in later art,
especially in works of the
Attic school
, this savage characteristic is
softened into a more youthful and graceful aspect.

This transformation or humanization of the Satyr appears throughout late
Greek art. Another example of this shift occurs in the portrayal of
Medusa
and in that of the
Amazon
, characters who are traditionally
depicted as barbaric and uncivilized. A very humanized Satyr is depicted in a
work of Praxiteles
known as the “Resting
Satyr
“.


Notice, the goat on the left has a short goat tail, but the Greek
satyr on the right has a long horse tail. Not a goat tail (Attic
ceramic, 520 BCE).

Older satyrs were known as
sileni
, the younger as
satyrisci
. The

hare
was the symbol of the shy and timid satyr. Greek spirits known
as
Calicantsars
have a noticeable resemblance to
the ancient satyrs; they have goats’ ears and the feet of
donkeys
or goats or horses, are covered with
hair, and love women and the dance.

Although they are not mentioned by
Homer
, in a fragment of
Hesiod
‘s works they are called brothers of the
mountain nymphs and
Kuretes
, strongly connected with the
cult of Dionysus
. In the Dionysus cult, male
followers are known as satyrs and female followers as
maenads
or bacchants.

In Attica there was a species of drama known as the legends of gods and
heroes, and the chorus was composed of satyrs and sileni. In the Athenian
satyr plays
of the 5th century BC, the chorus
commented on the action. This “satyric drama” burlesqued the serious events of
the mythic past with lewd
pantomime
and subversive mockery. One complete
satyr play from the 5th century survives, the
Cyclops
of
Euripides
.

The Satyr and the Traveller
, one of
Aesop’s Fables
, features the satyr as the
benevolent host for a traveller in the forest in winter. The satyr is bewildered
by the man’s claim to be able to blow hot and cold with the same breath, first
to warm his hands, then to cool his porridge, and turns him out for this
inconstancy.

A papyrus
bearing a long fragment of a satyr play
by Sophocles
, given the title ‘Tracking Satyrs’ (Ichneutae),
was found at
Oxyrhynchus
in
Egypt
, 1907.

In Roman mythology
and art


Satyr pursuing a
nymph
, on a Roman mosaic

Faunus were conflated in the popular and poetic imagination with Latin
spirits of woodland and with the rustic Greek god Pan. Roman satyrs were
described as goat-like from the
haunches
to the
hooves
, and were often pictured with larger
horns, even
ram
‘s horns. Roman poets often conflated them
with the fauns
.

Roman satire
is a
literary
form, a
poetic essay
that was a vehicle for biting,
subversive social and personal criticism. Though Roman satire is sometimes
linked to the Greek satyr plays, satire’s only connection to the satyric drama
is through the subversive nature of the satyrs themselves, as forces in
opposition to urbanity,
decorum
, and civilization itself.

Other references



Nymphs and Satyr

(William-Adolphe
Bouguereau
, 1873)

In many versions of the
Bible
, Isaiah 13:21 and 34:14, the English word
“satyr” is used to represent the
Hebrew
se’irim, “hairy ones,” from “sa’ir”
or “goat”. There is an allusion to the practice of sacrificing to the se’irim (KJV
“devils”; ASV “he-goats”) in Leviticus 17:7. They may correspond to the “shaggy
demon of the mountain-pass” (azabb al-‘akaba) of old
Arab
legend. It may otherwise refer to literal
goats, and the worship of such.

The savant
Sir William Jones
often refers to the Indian
mythological
Vānaras
as satyrs/mountaineers in his
translations of Sanskrit
works.[citation
needed
]
This view is generally held to be a mistake
by present day researchers.[citation
needed
]

Baby satyr


Female Satyr Carrying Two Putti by
Claude Michel
(1738–1814)


Bronze satyr (height 0.35m) from the
Mahdia shipwreck
(Musée
National du Bardo
, Tunis.)

Baby satyrs, or child satyrs, are
mythological creatures
related to the satyr.
They appear in popular
folklore
,
classical
artworks,

film
, and in various forms of local art.

Some classical works depict young satyrs being tended to by older, sober
satyrs, while there are also some representations of child satyrs taking part in
Bacchanalian
/
Dionysian rituals
(including drinking
alcohol
, playing
musical instruments
, and
dancing
).

The presence of a baby or child satyr in a classical work, such as on a
Greek vase
, was mainly an aesthetic choice on
the part of the artist. However, the role of a child in Greek art might imply a
further meaning for baby satyrs:
Eros
, the son of
Aphrodite
, is consistently represented as a
child or baby, and Bacchus, the divine sponsor of satyrs, is seen in numerous
works as a baby, often in the company of the satyrs. A prominent instance of a
baby satyr outside
ancient Greece
is
Albrecht Dürer
‘s 1505 engraving, “Musical Satyr
and Nymph with Baby (Satyr’s Family)”. There is also a
Victorian period
napkin ring depicting a baby
satyr next to a barrel, which further represents the perception of baby satyrs
as partaking in the Bacchanalian festivities.

There are also many works of art of the
rococo
period depicting child or baby satyrs in
Bacchanalian celebrations. Some works depict female satyrs with their children;
others describe the child satyrs as playing an active role in the events,
including one instance of a painting by
Jean Raoux
(1677–1735). “Mlle Prévost as a
Bacchante” depicts a child satyr playing a tambourine while Mlle Prévost, a
dancer at the Opéra, is dancing as part of the Bacchanal festivities.

Satyrs and orangutan

In the 17th century, the satyr legend came to be associated with stories of
the orangutan
, a great ape now found only in
Sumatra
and
Borneo
. Many early accounts which apparently
refer to this animal describe the males as being sexually aggressive towards
human women and towards females of its own species. The first scientific name
given to this ape was
Simia satyrus
.

Varieties

  • Island Satyrs, which according to
    Pausanias
    were a savage race of red-haired,
    satyr-like creatures from an isolated island chain.
  • Libyan Aegipanes (goat-pans), which according to
    Pliny the Elder
    lived in
    Libya
    , had human heads and torsos, and the
    legs and horns of goats, and were similar to the Greek god
    Pan
    .
  • Libyan Satyr, which according to
    Pliny the Elder
    lived in
    Libya
    and resembled humans with long,
    pointed ears and horse tails, similar to the Greek nature-spirit satyrs.

Medieval bestiaries
also mention several
varieties of satyrs, sometimes comparing them to apes or monkeys.


 

A bald, bearded, horse-tailed satyr balances a winecup on his penis,
on an Attic red-figured
psykter
, ca. 500-490 BC

  • Centaur
    , half man, half horse (Greek
    mythology
    )
  • Faun
    , (Roman
    mythology
    )
  • Fairy
  • Glaistig
    , (Scottish
    folklore
    )
  • Jinn
  • Leszi
    , (Slavic
    mythology
    )
  • List of satyrs in popular culture
  • Pan
    , (Greek mythology)
  • Sileni
    , (Greek mythology)

  • The Birth of Tragedy
    , by
    Nietzsche
  • Thiasos
    , the
    Dionysian
    retinue
  • Torgo, a character in
    Manos: The Hands of Fate
  • Urisk
    , goat-man fairy (Scottish folklore)

  • The Trackers of Oxyrhynchus
    , a play

 

Medieval depiction of a Satyr (Satyrs) from the
Aberdeen Bestiary
.

 In
Greek mythology
, the
satyr

Marsyas  is a
central figure in two stories involving death: in one, he picked up the
double flute (aulos)
that had been abandoned by
Athena
and played it;
in the other, he challenged
Apollo
to a contest of music and lost his
hide and life. In
Antiquity
, literary sources often emphasise
the hubris
of Marsyas and the justice of
his punishment.

In one conjunction
Rhea
/Cybele,
and his episodes are situated by the mythographers in
Celaenae
(or Kelainai) in
Phrygia
(today, the town of
Dinar
in
Turkey
), at the main source of the
Meander
(the river
Menderes
).

When a genealogy was applied to him, Marsyas was the son of
Olympus
(son of
Heracles
and
Euboea
, daughter of
Thespius
), or of
Oeagrus
, or of Hyagnis.
Olympus was, alternatively, said to be Marsyas’ son or pupil.

Berytos in Phoenicia

History

Beirut’s history goes back more than 5000 years.

Excavations in the

downtown

area have unearthed layers of Phoenician, Hellenistic, Roman, Arab

and Ottoman remains.

The first historical reference to Beirut dates from the 14th century BC, when it

is mentioned in the

cuneiform

tablets of the “Amarna

letters.” Ammunira

of Biruta[10]

(Beirut) sent three letters to the

pharaoh of Egypt
.

Biruta is also referenced in the letters from

Rib-Hadda

of Byblos
. The

most ancient settlement was on an island in the river that progressively silted

up. The city was known in antiquity as Berytus (Βηρυτός) (see also

List of traditional Greek place names

); this name was taken in 1934 for the

archaeological journal published by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the

American University of Beirut

.


 

Canaanean Blade
. Suggested to be
part of a
javelin
. Fresh grey
flint
, both sides showing
pressure flaking
. Somewhat narrower
at the base, suggesting a
haft
. Polished at the extreme
point. Found on land of the Lebanese Evangelical School for Girls in
the
Patriarchate
area of Beirut.

 Hellenistic/Roman

period

In 140 BC, the city was destroyed by

Diodotus Tryphon

in his contest with

Antiochus VII Sidetes

for the throne of the

Seleucid

monarchy. Beirut was soon rebuilt on a more regularized

Hellenistic

plan, renamed Laodicea in Phoenicia (Greek:

Λαοδικεια ή του Φοινίκη) or Laodicea in

Canaan, in honor of a Seleucid

Laodice

. The modern city overlies the ancient one and little archaeology had

been accomplished until after the end of the civil war in 1991; now large sites

in the devastated city center have been opened to archaeological exploration. A

dig in 1994 established that one of Beirut’s modern streets, Souk Tawile, still

follows the lines of an ancient Hellenistic and Roman one.

Mid-first century coins of Berytus bear the head of

Tyche
, goddess of

fortune; on the reverse, the city’s symbol appears: a dolphin entwines an

anchor. This symbol was taken up by the early printer

Aldus Manutius

in 15th century

Venice
. Beirut

was conquered by Agrippa in 64 BC and the city was renamed in honor of the

emperor’s daughter, Julia; its full name became Colonia

Julia Augusta

Felix Berytus.

The veterans of two

Roman

legions
were established in the city: the fifth Macedonian and the third

Gallic. The city quickly became Romanized. Large public buildings and monuments

were erected and Berytus enjoyed full status as a part of the empire.

Under the Romans, it was enriched by the dynasty of

Herod the Great

, and was made a

colonia

, Colonia Iulia Augusta Felix Berytus, in 14 BC. Beirut’s

school of law was widely known at the time.

Two of Rome’s most famous jurists,

Papinian

and Ulpian

, both natives of Phoenicia, taught at the law school under the

Severan

emperors. When

Justinian

assembled his

Pandects

in the 6th century, a large part of the corpus of laws were

derived from these two jurists, and Justinian recognized the school as one of

the three official law schools of the empire (533). Within a few years, as the

result of a disastrous earthquake (551),

the students were transferred to

Sidon
.

About 30,000 were killed in Berytus alone and, along the Phoenician coast, total

casualties were close to 250,000.


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